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                    <text>F
THE RIEND.
Series, Vol.

New

No.

1,

1852.

JUNE 4,

HONOLULU,

2.

Old

IX.

Series, VOL

9

Islands, assembled

Contents
OF THE FRIEND, JUNE 4,

Ha A.

Dr.

peninre Si-delte*.
xnmricm

und

MMttlppj river

I*2

-

up

-

Old Tubal

ji

-

"

Cain

days when

In the

in which

FlfJllElßa©.
Agricultural Society.

The R. H.
JUNE

IS;V2.

4,

Of late there has been

than

more

six

weeks

of

interest

afTairs

of.a

In

had

the

For

no

maill

the

ized

by

Honolulu,

at

sense,

been

have

ing

of Benevolent

Royal

tion of
sive

a

the

Capt.

"dust"

gossip

furnished

have

and

the

by repairing

abundant

dcalh has occurred

It is estimated there
about

40,000

Imports
years

at

(hem

only

upon

the

averaged

in the

to

about

the

during

The

despots of Europe

to

the U. S.

very

The Chinese
Late

news

subjeot

(Xl per

The Rev.

delivering

a

on

immigration

at

cent

Mr.

over

Hunt,

Sandwich Islands, which

spirit

of

7,500 had

accounts.

freights

Lectures upon
attract

Lifo

died in

New

101 years

of

the

considerable

York,

Washington,

at

a

Dr.

facts

many
to

of

now

Ha-

was

at

occu-

inter-

read

with

refer-

the

it in

ing.

Surely

ers,

graziers,

raising

their

In his report
invention

Mr.

made

Weston.

a

itself

It

for

purifying
at

Agricultural meetings
planters,

to

is

plan-

the

new

surely

Ingenuity

an

has

money-mak-

opening

was

quite

graziers,

and all

age

of

The

audience

including

public

and

plough

publishgrow-

Music

way
well

may

when

hoe,

lends her

Eloquence

influence,

her

the

of R.

day

charms,

flowers and

vegetables,

A.

H.

cattle,

of horses,

S.

swine,

the

at

of

products

dairy, plantations, work-shops, &amp;c,
New Court House.

All

took

testify

the great advance upon former
A
years.
is coming at the Sandwich Islands !
better

day

the

Among
Cow,

She

cow,"

after

of the

sincerely

we

ships

this

had

from ihe

example.

that there

was

full.

and

We ters,

who

around
a

large

Think

daily.
bring

Cape

Cow landed

command

a

at

your

Horn !
the

high

notice

a

large

The

the elite of the Sandwich its will

Reading
not

allow

left

just

condition.

by
the

Most

outward bound

United Stales will
assured

W.

Capt.
difficulty

no

ago,

America,"

of five months, ap-

that other

hope

days

"South

passage

there

Horn.—

Cape

remarkably good

in

peared

a

animals

the first Amer-

eijfht

(hat she

considering

vessel,

via

here

Walker,

of

being

imported

landed

was

Capt.

low

exhibition

"rare

was one

in

bringing

of

this,

wives
A

one

and

good

us

her

gallon

ship

ye

fol-

mas-

children

American

Sandwich islands would

price.
3d

a

in

engaged, in any

inspiration,

Exhibition

of these of milk

foreign residents.

In accordance with

original

coffee

of the Islands,

recently

tha advanced

to

lady, Miss

pleasure

sugar planters,

about
out, besides she furnished

sugar.

the

of

her

whale

and

was

soon

and ladies their presence.

sugar.— and

the Islands in the

at

labor-saving

attendance

of

subject

Yankee
interesting fact, that

observed

attention

of the Koloa

was

would

copy

an

American

take

we

our

Agriculture

genius

ican

upon the

allusion

Tho

possible

of fowls.

reported

invention of

gentleman

highest

turn

Wood, proprietor

by

and

a

hope

we

closed with

an

cheerfully the
grasp

the

at

but

address,

and

great
We

to

latter

The
of the

by

wnich

Reynolds,

the

became the

a

peeple.

were

Ode, composed

Poesy

enthusiasti-

print.

The exercises

in the

of

for the press, and

requested

important place

less

no

about the

more

dignity, intrinsi-

spoke
it well

as

Agricultural

2nd

bank

a

most

a

interesting

less

no

all who would

number of

Guard

has
the

highly

Banking,

He

The
theme

(he Sandwich

at

and

importance

eloquently,

growing

see

amount.

Wyllie,

uuon

and

cally

the

King's Minis(er of For-

Mr.

Poultry.

ing machine

Francisco is

attention.
A

The

already displayed
in

English vessels.

in San

of

course

last

command

ships

the

tation
into California.

the increase,

passages

clipper
at

to

pouring

of

consolidating

rapidly.

are

was

engaged their

China,

utility

from China indicates the

immigration

Am.

are

of

condition that

of several

its

history,

and useful

of his

inspiration

cally and relatively.

say

present-

society

morning,

the establishment

News.

increasing

equal

last five valuable report upon

stated

their power which is

then

on

the

position —Agriculture

Islands,

and

principles

happily blended.

were

speaker caught
and

while Mr. Janion, Chilean
islands, Sandwich Islands,
fowls,

$870,000 annually.

Items of Foreign

was

places $500,

annually

reading

Consul, presented

islands

;"

young

of facts

of important

practical Consular Representative

and that

socie(y,

an

valuable Report
ence

cattle.
the

at

are

that the

The remainder of the

the eign Relations,

last year.

during

raise

society

esting reports.

news.

islands, number 125, and among
one

topics

pied

children of Am. Missionaries

The

said

10

at

A copy

Bishop,

$1,000

of

of the

disposal

table-talk.

I
tems of Domestic

of facts.

at

character-

was

sound

exten-

above

inst.,

financial affairs

appears

sum

Ad-

an

socie(y for publication.

waiian government
and

store,

occasioned

(he

ed his report of the
It

the Ist

usual

speaker's

The treasurer, Mr.

funded the

on

The address

knowledge

and

society.

organiza(he

society,

Snow's

of

meeting

the

requested by

meet-

Anniver-

Society,

religious

new

streets

our

Societies,

Agricultural

fire of

all,

for

meetings

The

stirring.

of the American Missionaries,

saries
the

rather

Hawaiian Parliament, General

of the

A. M.

o'clock,

lands,

House,

Court

new

with

opened

Judge Lee, President,

by (he Hon.

of

absence

other

nature

institution,

important
dress,

respecting

domestic

calm

news.

have

we

from the United States

topics

dead

a

regards foreign

as

was

address of Mr. Allen,

knowledge

a

statement

suggestions,
of this

Anniversary exercises

The second

in Honolulu,

earth

:

•'•

-

HONOLULU,

direc-

might,

of

was a man

Next followed the

Tu-uE

Allen,

opened

Marshall and Beckwith

tion of Messrs.

M

-

H.

were

excellent music, under the

most

"

tkc.

news,

-

-

Voir .im.

Original Poetry,—Now

with

hill

Chapel,
hear the

to

£.

The exercises

Consul.

MhwObl

run

ciilr.,
Pirncy in the P
Report on lay il School,
ohitu try, Ship

S.

U.

Tem-

-

Uencnl Meeting
the

14

10, 11,

inst.,

Ist

the Hon.

Address, by

-

Arinivers trie* of .Missionary, Tract, Itible,

l&gt;oes

Annual

»

Socicty'K proceeding*.

Vcwcomb'ri Lecture.

the Seamen's

at

of the

evening

ft

Kiiitoriili,
R.

the

on

1859.

of
us

day, R. H.

Reports,

which

lo comment

A.
our

upon.

S.
lim-

�Jhabits

resolution

by tclass

adopted

was

quested

deliver a lecture
the

produced by
In

be

performed

ed

a

for

;

to

for

offers itself

require

duty

press

mechanic of this

skillful

or

i

of materi-

power

any other

most
coun-

In

be well

fortify

to

and it

profession,
that

for

i
mind
i

the

produce

The moderate

his

the

highest possible

vouchcis

"

of

many

work

following

chiefly

up

bad effects

ately
and

rather

the various

themselves

place

moral

a

in

a

cure

of

and

of every

view,

leads

of

point

renders

disease,

more

;

because

tropical
I may
specific etTecl,

he

vanced

disclosed

the secret,

it

powcis

destructive inof the

icy regions

of evidence has been

for the

las(

hardship

who

increase tbeir

lo

from alcoholic

better able

those

than

but

Walts,

I

two

curry

India

to

both

in

every

that

is

(hey called him

for illustrations worth

water

printer

theory

the

Chrisholme,

has

fever

raged

although

who

the

extent

by the

states

in

this

Important

fact

that

in

a

from this

Wo

thus

of total abDr.

have

hot, tho cold,

thai while the yellow and find

the island of Grenada in the

subject
re-

coneerva-

are

the

variation from
is

attended

according

the

to

standard.

rapidly

and

up-

Temperate

abstinence

less risk

or

greater

(deviation*

theo-

offered

be

can

practical

tile

upon

Total

of

principles

American,"

those

than all

more

tors of health and every

u

nf Dr.

celebrated

of

gion*, Temperance principle*

he

us

temperance in

practice

even to

All evidence

could establishes the

climates! with

tropical

in

ad-

lur

correctness

that

und in

at

London

the press

to

tVater

one

in

that sojourned

The

principle

curried

The

himself,

fields,

stairs

"

of the

strength

perior

by assuring &lt;

in short that ho

one

climate.

tropical

en-

even

but cold water, could

forms up

heavy

to

look

strength.

Inn

driuking nothing

that he

uni-

Lincoln's

near

con-

(he great Frank-

by

and

accu-

to

years

(wenty

abstained

stronger

were

strong beer

a

as

but

nothing

time's list ;

on

termed it

of

accelerates drink,

particularly

drinks

conversation,

into

mental faculties unclouded,

vice;

every

(he

over,

most

a

bad loom, at a time ; while the beer drinkers
younger hemes
su1 now contrived to could carry but one ; (bus proving (lie
god.

dillicult the stinence is confirmed

more

climates,

diseases of

to

view it

element

in

conservative

many

entet

drunkenness Johnson's

is,

the

manner

drawn from

are

establish

that
in
;
consequence retical disquisitions
many
free, bis on the subject.
his health wns excellent, bis spuils

ob-

account

given

Journals and

of lin, that those "bo

first

B

indisposition recommend the antidiluvian beverage

the

J4G Ho-

| I'uge,

exercise.

vast amount

A

re-

the

maintain

them

the

spiritu-

Lectures.

mulating

a

be in

oil';

passed

were

find

him, und

years

aggravate

superficial

to

But the truth

point

to

(hu( he had drank,

me

resulting from

direct

their effects

medical

attack,

the

to, and

ol disease,

produce

their

would expect

one

near

when

immedi-

not

cases,

consequently

;

other agents.

so

as

predispose

causes

than

climate,

in

many

kept

that

for

was

lo

when

usual,

is

us

form level, alter

and get

climates, is

hot

in

conspicuous

so

they

servers

in

are,

surprised

was

the

to vinous

respect

circumstance,

this

by

(hem flag,

bowed to (he rosy

in

spirituous potations

see

died

and all who survived drank water
much

of the

ago,
some years
for his convivial talents and flow of dure

effects of (he bottle

:

language

The delusion

"

used

life ami

hilarity

to

very

uses

who

ol
Franklin, given by
1 attributed lus ani-j statement
company with him
of the
whilst
in (lie employ
to the wine, and expert, d that
malion and

his elabo-

Climates,

Tropical

on

on

used

that those

indolent

un

conclusive

like

Prince

«ho

happened

(i

were res-

mentioned, (except

All (lie facts above

it, is

culls

at

gentleman

survived

The others

firm (he Statement made

n

4

case,

large

fellow citizens.

worthy

our

incubus

an

in
James Johnson in 1813,

Dr.
rate

like

rests

he

us

returned

without North.

prescriptions

of ull

The Bret time I

spirits.

especially

to

remember

instances

liquors,

medical

heart."

drinks, by markable

of alcoholic

conduale, has been deemed by very many,
in tropical climates,
health
cive
and this belief

rithu,"

worst

und

the

under simi-

of whom

remarked

ho

led

safk's

pre-

and

all

died.

pure
poet
fluence of Alcohol in ihc
votary of Haeehus,

u

physician

n

"liquid

pensii'e
I

of

(lie

and

both

:—-a

excellent

un

Homer

to

all

g*M

repeatedly enjoined.—

has

though

a

and

drooping

our

bowl

Wales Island

include wine, porter and

to

Han*,

of the

myself i

should cheer

we

much

not

was

one

if culled

in

pervades

languor

It is
in

Inst,)

triumphant,

reign*

be

Hkai.iii.

mirth-inspiring

predecessor

i

and will,

use

intend

I

body

remark doubt his

to

rmnti

with the

which

cept

correctness.

for their

which

in

proper
taken, I hold

public,

the

to

and

ispirits

opinions

order

highest

but

is

position

every

responsible
upon,

our

of the

authorities

by

remarks and

—

all

In

in

cued.

afterwe

left

left

the

died.

Still another

uccidenlally

one

2

and

were

dining

were

provisions

circumstances,

Eng-

an

They

(wo

only

spring.

were

years when

we

slowly

more

from this

retentive will

the more

unaccountable

an

it will But Huliz,

examina(ion of (his subject

our

have

but

Bay.

of doors

out

Englishman

without

Russians

perfectly

u

It might appear very reusonuble, that

i

'

try.

und the

;

deviate

we

would climate where

the

by

sickness

much

so

to

in drink, dining the first year lar

gradually

wards,

approach

we

8

the

James,

of 22 persons wintered

Hudson's

labor

to

case

In home in

Capt.

crew

weather

severest

and Arctic

;

in view.

a

island in

an

compelled

former

latter

be held

much the belter chance

so

avoiding

and

i

the

than

limit- of that invaluable blessing

so

more

constructed

been

in

investigation
of

of

(o

necessarily

must

leas(,

ill

re-

unsatisfactory

an amount

our

hydraulic

a

than has yet

to

compress,

large

so

compass,

as

for the

in advance

in which this

manner

i
iaqueous regisM

the*

mi

ex-

both.

with

lishman,

in the luxuiies of the table another

ever

neurer

with

lliut thy

theory,

risk

shoiMd

diseases short, (he

permitted

may be

Society I

the

apologise

al

Mr. President,

less

much

and this

dillerent

very

consonant

is

as

indulge

muy

with

:
re-

of Alcoholic drinks.

use

responding,

quest of

the

on

It

well

as

all of scurvy in
i

confounds

(he

the seasoned und un-j

which

body,

perience

Total Temperance Society
the Hawaiian
Dr.
Newcoinb be
Resolved,—That
to

of

seasoned possess.

April 29th, 1852.
The following

between

discrimination
dc-

Chapel, Honolulu

livertd at the Seaman's

It

obvious.

sufficiently

sons

Temperance Society,

the Hawaiian

Before

Lecture.

Newcomb's

Dr.

1862.

JUNE,

FRIEND,

THE

10

(he

passed

(ho

over

region*

temperate

that in them all, medical testimony

notwithstanding the prestige of fashion, the

of custom, and (lie tyrrany of habit,
West Indies the French inhabitant! had an force
on those organs
say.
from un attack, whose lias boldly declared in advance of the Temof climate almost total
influence
deleterious
exemption
to which (he
evils to the human
If the Northern inemode of living, as he declares, compared to perance movement ibo
is
peculiarly directed.
in alcholic
und
regular system produced by indulgence
subject to hepatic de- tbut of the English, is temperate
briate is
a

proverbially

when the coldness of the

rangement

by

phere powerfully counterpoises
on

the

how
by strong drink,

internal

ternal and

the

can

to

Anglo
when

escape,

causes

Eust

It has

run

in

the

considered wise

(hat

naturals.

"arriving

our

pertect

our

respects

regime

"Strangers,"
in

modes of

ceive this
in

Mr.

says

too

soon

living followed by

tho

residents there."

1

to

be

a

good

in

tue ;

gerous precept

in

useful

lesson

not

that it is

the West

a most

Indies

for

vir-

cursorily examined in

(he

extreme

be

it would
of

a

in tho frozen

well

to

temperature

Morriek,

a

proceed

We will

well

i 1C33

■ Dutch,

with

persons.

dan- ■

coast

rea-

sailors

experiments

ono at

and

were

common

the

All

(he

men.

made
other

latitude 78°.

left in each

place,

by

and

on

all

however

Among

symptoms.

the

to

dwelling

(he

more

kidneys,
spleen
lungs and stomach ; mania, pluciisy,

tract

Gout and will

from

premise

In

in in with

"

the As

you

will

I

to

ex-

an

of Medi-

that

have

those

never

tho

of

being over-abstemious
preventives

causes

part

of

this

disease

charg-

himself.
of

are

of

preventing its return,

gout.

for

intemperance and indolence,

means

with

acquainted

thought

One word upon the

most

died best

treat

Hosack's Practice

Dr.

gentleman

ing

palsy.

discuses

and '!)«.
pages (597

I will

the

and

fashionable

the

of this

Seven

of the

mentioned: —Inflammations
may be
of the bruin,
and

Anion"

and

perished

few

a

of (be liver,

mention

in

notice

medical writers

poison—without

their

upon

to

by

by idiocy, apoplexy, epilepsy

a'op-

provisions

were

Spitzbcrgen

of Greenland in

of this

Bay, latitude W»SnV cine,

supplied

and 2 of his
except himself
two

use

look of the

of the North.

Dune, wintered

KM!) in Hudson's
was

• scurvy

■

regions

gen-

of Temperance

advantage*

had with him (14

even
a

the other

(he He

con-

thus

manner

year

experienced
do

diseases.

epidemic and pestilential

to

Capl.

the pres-

adopt

of their habits, fall the first

(ropical clima(es,

tion

non-

medical nrtixim,

am,

at

Curtis,

is scarcely
India where temperance

and certain I

the

taught

the force of facts illustrate its claims to

every

of (he

India, if (hey regard

ervation of health cannot

European

drinks.

degree.

bus

consequence

Having
eral

a

the

tako

to

model

a

victims

ex-

in

seasoned European for

thing

us

sympathy.

been

uncommon

an

Experience

or

each others effects by
unison, and promote

wonderful

in

action

diseases ascribed
internal injury induced thai the drunkard and moderate drinker will,

surface, the

West Indian expect

atmos-

i(s

so

(he
the

may be

�THE

summed

in

up

(heir

Instead of wine,
fermented

the

lb*

in

both

supposed,

took

the

me

also

he

us

sions

abtnimd

not

from

it

has

these

had

he

means

of 30 years,

the hey

dey

of

in

though
and

.youth

the

escaped

its

gout

early life, in

Dr. Hebberden

abstinence from
this disease

in

A short

wine.

tighl

as

vice and

a

is

the

goal.

the result of

addicted

those who

dulgence,
bility

to

in the

are

usually

fixed,

withdrawn

quickly

the

;

und sometimes

wholly unable
He

becomes

irraacible

ho

is tormented with

a

dogs, snakes,

sees

imal*

his

ill

crawling

on

und

loom

his

on

for the purpose of robbing,

ing

him.

To

avoid

these

killing
and

the

to

;

runs

the window

ted,

the

to

to

leap

out

At Other

violently.

that he hears loud and

him,

or

is

;

loud and

or

annoy-

other

horrid

greatly agita-

and

tunes

strange

frequent

sometimes

action

schemes

out

Street

the

;

he

fancies

knocking

;

some

requests

runs

with

of

projects

(error

frightful

and
and

insists that he is

to

occupations.

go

state

room,

in the

agita(ion

from

disgusting

ap-

well, and confined

sinister intention

against him, and

ont

If

in

character

I

un

held

adhesion

gave in his

and

of the

practice

compensation

or

emi-

has also

employed

of his

portion

kingdom,

people

munity.

his

at

At ihe

by

to

missionaries,

and acajou*

who

of ardent

production

endeavor

will

they
in

lice

is the

dis-

of the

pota-

liquors.

only

cure

of

practitioner,

every

before his

from

this

sense

is

and it

aston-

evils

physical

have

cause

ne-

long

not

rc"-

since

of sentiment

unanimity

evil in the minds of all.

of

its

duty
und

England

Tremors

inability

on

this

the

on

is rousing itself
and

subject,

we

of Eu-

continent

Ihe

divided

are

Wo

author.

to

answer

or

unsteadiness

our

in the

present

pints

firmly

to

if the

;

to

and other

made

effect

to

the

this,

shah* and tremble, which
lo

nervous

The

objects

portions

now

begin

distant from Ihe

most

ner-

until

similarly affected

become

nt

length

the power of locomotion is lost.

often

accompanied
of

the

In

of

an ac-

lunbi«-somctimes

und dimness of vision.

vertigo

It

sensation

a

skin, relieved by

under ihe

movement

with

ar-

fall

to

is

creeping

and

debility

correct it hv fresh doses of

to

centres

in

objects

grasp

is

effort

begin

dent spirits.

tive

tho

of

morning

taken—com-

stimulus is

patient ascrib**

vous

name

form of disease

a

by

ally extending

the

published

in the upper extremities and graduof (he body, or
to other

mencing

hands

com-

Huss

writers.

before the ordinary

an

awa-

under the

of this disease

.given

us

lo

Professor

time

voluntary muscles, especially

intemperance endeavors

of

;

eves

entile

an

I his

forms

the hands

malady.

that the social and

find in

investi-

spirituous

dfet-drink,

a

nosological

lo

The symptoms

able

every

individuals and the

same

of Jlteuholismits Chronicus
new

4

cost

iraverse

;

He

of (he evils of in-

sense

introducing

work

able

would

spirits

many.

own

lo

to

for-

and offered full

distillers

brcn acceded

has

disease purpose.

to

King

principles

the

lo

society,

nil

to

abandon their

an

little

a

(he

;

Queen personally attended and the

and
mer

audience shall condense them

my

indulgence

un

But the medical profession
to

Ihe

lo

disease

a

upon

and other

tion of the subject
tions
sti

of

iking gigantic

he

(bis

u(

monster

tire

of in-

Professor

Holland
us

well

an

as

Schroeder Vander Kolk,

exterminating

the

by

(he

ahsoption,

this

health,

so
are

water.

upon

of

us

a

ing

in-

and

results

proves
is

(hat

all the powers of the

impaired

body
gradually undermined by
us

intemperance

by

Ihe pro-

spirits

during
and inthe

fire

that

are

Legislative body

two

although

the
injurious cfforcing themselves
in consequence of

severe,

by

advanced

;

nnd

have

many

of the

cases

under

come

has taught

experience

without

Epilepsy

assum-

This disease
Eleven

Honolulu.

to

with convul-

sometimes

paroxysm.

years past

it from

recognise

symptoms

me to

difficulty,
in

are

com-

mon.

A strong

ethereal

expiration by
a

cases

of

not true

striking

odor

nil tho

given
hate met

was

I

Epilepsy

and

such
or

as

five

require

to

athletic

llixor muscle
grasp

off in

with,

furnishes

diagnosis.

The violence of the convulsions

produced

as

necessarily

of ardent

unknown

not

membrane which is

He follows up (he at(ack

less

or

epileptic

true

in my notice
ast

digestion,

of

u

more

of within the

bever-

liquors

lining

or

secondary

He informs

the

Alcohol

spirituous

mucous

employment

tellect

wages

against the

the process

oxygenation

of

war

one

it, and exhibits their injurious

effects upon (he

cess

that

assisting

examining

of

abuse

He shows
of

pathologists,

scientific

most

our

sions

is

iquity.

pursuit of -1 fects

contradicted,

blows

unmitigated evil,

accompanied

Another form is

und with the clear convic-

absolute and

its

various of the stomach.

(he

person

its

by

of wine

produced

the window, and after

to

all

suppression.

year since in Stockholm

over one

translates

of this

cases

depends

as

of

cessarily brines the results

the stead

at

continued

imaginary

permission

usual

up

a

about

hurriedly

some

shirts

in

are

calculates,

money,

presence

with

body

walks

to

paritions

his

he

;

;

picks up
calls

it

directly impede

His mind nnd

Percival

happily

take the trouble

The experience

noises around age.

door.

of

that

t at ions

muke his escape,

to

threaten*

vociferates,

ram

door

is

towards its

anxiously

most

grand temperance meeting

a

or

room

illusions, he often culls out loudly for assistance

At

Europe.

forms sensation us well as motion is lost and
vermin rope Ihe attention of distinguished Professors
the patient becomes puitially paralized.
directed to tin investigahas recently been

clothes,

that various
have entered
persons

can

Corymby'tr,

some

lew

a

will

they

gate farther into
cover

disgusting

disgusting

the, bed, und

with

met

disorder, jsulting

an-

of ardent

use

attention of the government has been di-

the

into six

that

possible

is

sleep.— ishing

mice, and other

cats,

cause

we

answers

lonthm

of

Physician,

then Cold water,

He fancies thai he

we

cause,

face

his

in

of the

has this evil arisen that

extent

an

to

"

the

drunken country in

most

of which

blossoms."

less continued ; against

alarming,

ludicrous apparitions.

It

and if

feels well, and

or

more

of various

succession
or

says he

loquacious,

rtaine

fro, and is frequently

menial

the

To such

the physiognomy of temperance, both

that

us

in

and

;

one

;

pau1741

Jt appears from statistical evidence that
to the had eminence of be-

a

(Iron," "Inch Dr.

two

extremely

und

stom-

form

than

100

over

to

description

This

Irish

gOg

irritable,

is

disease

of
in

of Stockholm has
huhukles, and whelks, and knobs and flames of the University

have

at-

same

lo

assigned

causes

ken (he

hard drinker tells

often liver induced

or

ihe

Shakspear* describing
a

in the

may

present,

anil

thai

moment's

a

to manliest

ut

of the bands for this

patient

to obtain

begins

now

becomes

object

to

do

traces

no

another

from

stom-

systems

nervous

action

con-

from the

better understand the

In

this latter condition of

"

ol

and

had risen

rected

when

but

excitability

originating

disease,

any

is lb* result ofthe

considering

shall be able

u

about

east

glances,

;

When

the nent

or

—

the brain

cause,

(hu(

constancy

inflammation of the

shown

chief

proportion

population

142 58-IOO(hs

1845,

in

;

(he

of

spirits.

result-

not

diseased.

found of inflammatory

be

sleep,!

moment, and

a

walfcl continually

restless,

in

expression
are

the tremor

;

day

a

an

some

upon

the attention for

increases

second

"rosy

gener-

of

want

eyes

scrutinising

apparently

tracts

clearly

are

stimulant,— technical

lassitude,

.After

the

suspicion,

with (puck and

ach,

1847 il

ing
have

1000

100

was

the Dutch House of

to

1849—the

its Sweden is entitled

during

single debauch,)

(■

ol

will

report made

a

in

which

for

trained

derangement

clusive evidence

or

ina-

or

countenance

exhibits

Countenance

alarm and

of

hands.

In the

tremors

;

vomiting, giddiness,

expression

anxious

with

named cause,

obliged of fire."

are

of distress

of confusion in the head,

sense

the

disgust,

as

arc

of in-

habit

constant

feeling

u

dis-

drink

strong

with

commences

nausea, and

Stomach,

organ

When the.

soon

spirit

the

eternity,

death

uniformly

is

probably

mid

in

convul-

body.

alter

determining

is ach.

screw,

who

persons

to

liquor, suddenly

indisposition,

(he

common

from their accustomed

desist

its

This appears

from sickness,

hut

procure

it up

it—thai

(o

(urn

more

debauch in

a

habitually

an

far

A

is Delirium Tremens.

ease

It

patient

screw

hear

possibly

can

you

in

one

will

fearfully

so

suffer I'i'oin morbid

rlieiiinulisin—give another

al

ol

definition of

of the

language

Put your limb in

to

effects

similar

states

the

ed

first

be excused.

may

in

assigned place
been

his

recognise
Should

earth

on

By

Commons in

is restrained with pers

,

to

ditilh

occur,

scene

furiously

of pau-

perism.

the

high grade,

a

and often

unable

connection with the

he

pleasures,

had suffered from it.

not

is

Examinations

Upward*

(ha(

now

i( for about seek its

Gregory

wine.

By

rises lo

violent Iv

acquaintances

or

mother's (•lose the

and

prevented

hi

disease

and

difficulty

his friend*

nil

goat, und

But Dr.

exercise,

winter of

of his notions.

continuous increase

steady and

insists with Ihe

and

correctness

have delirious, talks incessantly

we

tlint with

the Gather*

on

exercise.

by

in

the

to

side he hud atlhnt lime
l(i years

whom

Polynesian,)

family predisposition

When the

the

on

patient becomes

Gregory, (of

1792 and '1)3, informed

only

other vehemence

or

water should become

liquors,

James

heard

ale

nf the sufferer."

beverage
Dr.

immediate antidotes.— becomes much exasperated,

spirits, porter,

11

1862.

JUNE,

FRIEND,

men

is most

of the hand

attendants that

the
to

secure

tho

often

patient—every

powerfully contracted

frequently

are

are

united efforts of four

and the

the
leaves marks upon

not removed for

days.

The

con-

tortions of the countenance, the suffused and glaring
for bresth, tho desperate
eye balls, tho struggles
muscular

efforts

of

the

patient;

(Concluded

on

succeeded by

page 14.)

«x-

�12

THE

FRIEND,

Rev. T. E.

Anniversaries.

Rev. R.

As stated in
"

stitution.
the

organized

the

propagation

of

On Sabbath
Mr.

Kaneohe,

founded

was

of the 2d Psalm, "Ask of
the heathen for thine

part

upon

me,

nf its

Rev.

ral

verse

give

and

the

grounds

were

posses-

and

of

terprize

exploring

which

missionary

the Micronesian

choir

ness

was

On

Tuesday evening,
meeting

at

church,

stone

particularly

the H. M. S. held
house

school

officers

following

r

.

Presidents.

Castle, Treasurer.
Bishop,

\

Hawaiian

society

Ex

Committee.

'

Society.

held its Xllh" annual

Seamen's

Chapel,

vice

The

Prayer

was

Wednesday

on

the

occupied

offered by the Rev. Mr.

ports of the secretary

and

accepted.

ceeded

the choice of officers

The

The

society

a

Rev. Mr.

society

F.

M.

The

chuir,

socie(y

next

for the

real-

prayer

by

the

by

(he

Commissioner.—

its

alcohol,

was

and effect!.

A copy

was

of

the

The

choice of officers,

regular

business,

deferred until the

was

of the

GENERAL,

past

sold

year,

and

pub-

and other
next

semi-

society.

ANNUAL

MEETING.

granted

2,636

organization,

Ger-

French,

English,

and

bibles,

month the American mis-

sionaries

stationed

have been

gathered

of

pose

lowing

languages.

the past

During

492 bibles, and 460 testaments.

Hawaiian

Tract

held its

Society

chapel,

on

holding

the

on
at

various

at

of the

evening

finances

The secretary

in

collected,
Society,
for

re-

the

from the

and remmilted

the

purchase

general distribution,
During

of
at

the past

has been

the

year

D.

Rev.

and Miss

and

tracts

income of

$316.92.

Castle,

and

Whitdesey,

ensuing

officers

were

year, E. O.

S. C.

Damon,

then

chosen

Secretary,

Pre-

The

society

then

Rev.

proceeded

to

Rev.

Rev. L. Smith,

Clark,

Rev.
E.

Mr. A. S.

The

Rev.

Hawaii,

A.

Bishop,

Cook,

Rev.

Mr. S.

S. Emerson,

Rev. D. Dole,

Rice.

E.

Johnson,

Mr.

Paris,

and Rev. Mr.

and

Mr.

formerly

A.

were

and

Also,

present.
the

Rev. Mr.
P.

J.

from the

the

Rev.
M.

Gulick,

Gulick,
new

of Kau,

Andrews, formerly

arrived

recently

destined for the
discuss the

E

Wilcox.

and the Rev.

Mr. O. H. Gulick, Treasurer.

D.

H. R. Hitchcock,

Parker,

Kauai—Rev.

Molokai,

Hall, Esq.,

T.
Mr.

Ogden.

pro-

following

Bond,

and Miss Brown.

Dwight,

Gulick,

Rev.

Baldwin,

E.

had been and Mr. W. H.

Tract

E.

Kinney.

Rev. B. W.
J.

Rev. A. ThursRev.

Lyman,

Oahu—-Rev. E. W.

il P.

Sandwich Istoe

G.

of the N.

Am.

books,

the

B.

Molokai—Rev.

of the

Castle,

$935.34

to

Bailey,

Rice (hen S.

stale

D.

Maui—Rev.

meeting

organization

the sum of

1842,

for the

society

Mr.

oc-

From the treasurer's report,

treasurer.

society

Mr.

and the

presented by

was

the

opened

the

May Conde,

pur-

The fol-

general meeting.

a

Islands,

for the

Honolulu,

present, —from

were

Rev.

ton,

Society.

anniversary,

the

and

chair,

sident, Rev.
...

for

Society,

the

The

Presidents,

history,

nature,

requested

lication.

$29200, monthly meeting

cupied

ensu-

Judd, Esq. President.
_

Johnson,

addressed

ably

was

Hon. L. Severance, U. S.

Lathrop,

The Rev. Mr. Taylor, President,

for the

|

held,

was

Mr.

Coco.

$77 His subject

memberships

27th.

were

viz.—

Rev. E. W. Clark )v.
Vice
Rev L.Smith

colpor-

Society.

28th.

the

President occupied

Rev. Mr.

lands.

treasurer

read, and

Q. P.

Mrs.

organization

that
Clark, appeared,

the President's ab-

Thurston—singing by the choir.

ing year,

was

Williams, Norwich,

read the annual report,

meeting

Rev. Mr.

President's

chair, in consequence of

to

H.

and

life

two

the past year, has been

with prayer.

Bible

evening, May 20th.

sence.

Wm.

Ihe

The

Seamen's

&gt;

Damon,'

of the

there

yet

and the contributionof

testaments, in

This

Auditor.

L. Smith,

of this

anniversary

Friday evening, May

Hawaii—Rev. T. Coan,

C. R.

the

useful-

the weather

Although

dish, and Portugese

Clark, corresponding
Secretary.
D. Pole, recording Secretary.

This

its

to

J

S. N.

a

$3,050.13.

E. W.

S. C.

Hawaiian Temperance

on

in behalf

sermon

a

Rev.

rhan, Welsh, Danish, Dutch, Spanish, Swee-

n. ,

'[Vice

(he

30(h,

The total amount of funds

during

2,076
*

preliminary

appointing

teur.

in-]

an

and others.

closed (he

taken for

were

(he Rev.

by

Messrs.

Rev.

reference

including

A.,

gratuitously,

Coan,

John li,

one

S.

Honolulu.

Total from

\

after

ficti-

find their

a

~)

G.B.Rowell,

at

taken up,

During

Alexander,

islands,!

near

chosen.

W. P.

with

and from the

the

when the

Armstrong,

preached

unpropitious,

viz. General

Rev. A. Thurston. President.

T.

rather

ta-

ized

business

infidel,

which

sustained

was

meeting

furnish (he
measures

furnishes

counteracting

Snow, Paris, Arms(rong,

H. B.

2.

shores."

our

The

seamen.

among

upon the occasion.

good

by

evening May

good attendance,
exercises,

$250.00

was

the

en-

Con. U.
the

to

This resoluhon

languages, j

adopted,

was

discussion,

of the society,

group)

ken up.

R.

scriptures

teresting

was

singing by

of the

own

for

[

and

short but

a

of the

the generous contribution of

way

the Rev.

societies,

tract

means

offered,

of these

in their

by

Resolved,
tracts

and licentious works

tious,

Andrews and Paris.

( expecting

followed the Rev. Mr. Parker, in

happy effort,

then

advocated

tendencies of the

pernicious

and

the

which

religious

efficient

most

the

duty

was

and Damon.

religious

eloquently

means to

population

This resolution

was

were

foreign

to

of

population

be

to

because

Before the
take efficient

to

On sabbath

M. D.

At the close

civil and

was

That it is the

Resolved,

foreign

prac-

truth

forwnrd the

urge

new

ought

Islands,

was

resolution

S. C. Damon

Gulick,

embark upon the

soon to

the

second

entire

missionary enterprize.
The Rev. Mr.

promote

That (he

most

religious

free circulation

a

Messrs

scriptu-

stated upon

distinctly

church should

the christian

to

This resolution

Society

thy

in

discourse,

missionary

The

tendency

liberty.

A

sound, logical manly

a

Bible

these

at

ably supported by the Rev. Mr. Armstrong,
Chapel. Mr.
Marsh, and the Hon. Judge Lee.

the Bth

Gulick

volumes of

with the

was

1. That the

the entire

upon

Messrs.

circulated and read

bringing

This resolution

then offer-

were

the

sion."
It

bear

Committee.

I.

presents the

(hese islands.

following resolutions,

Resolved,

of

and I will

for

Ex.

preached

inheritance,

ol the earth

)
&gt;

for

Resolved,

:

colportage,

plan

"That

in

parts

23d, the

Oahu,

The

con-

society.

the Seamen's

at

sermon,

His discourse

uttermost

in other

or

Damon,

shall be ed and discussed.

evangelical Christianity

evening, May

of

Parker,

the annual

society

the discretion of (he

at

its

ticable

Armstrong,

resolutions

of

sys(em

Mr. Andrew Johnstone, )

year ago.

of

second article

The object of this

the Islands of the Pacific,

the world,

one

following

Auditor.

Hardy,

Rev. S. C.

Hawaiian Missionary Society.
was

Taylor, Secretary.

Mr. A. S. Cooke, Treasurer.
Mr.

This society

1852.

JUNE,

of

Mr.

D.,

Wailua,

mission

to

U.

of
S.

Snow,

(son

of

Oahu,)

Micronesia.

The present meeting has been one ofmuch

�FRIEND,

THE

in

importance,
which

drawal of several

pecting

lands

pose (hat its
are

ex-

the

if the earth

to

The reader will find an allusion

of

its

to

School.

Royal

might

for,

of the ordi-

out

range

nary

school-boy

have solicited it for

compositions,

we

to

publication.

run

Hill ?"

thought
such

the

on

thing

a

that

to

subject,

if such

those who have

not

impossibility

for

an

accordingly

such

is

the

opposed

"uphill,"

all

here

regard

this

to

of the earth

the

to

equator, the

thirteen miles greater than
either

pole

tually

run

pole

to

River rises in

issippi

the

north.

rise, is six miles and
farther from the

47

into the

fraction,

the

making

thus

about four

run

river

if it

as

(4 4-90ths)

on

run

the

is

down,

as

running away from the

though
the

not

ocean

Now,

let

reason

much

so

a

for such

into

a

of the

really

grand exception

to

our

property

We find the

of all fluids
itself

ocean

to

the equator

and the

;

is accounted

will

for,

some

rivers

tice

by
by
I

of,

to

in which

manner

also

explain

the

thing

towards the

slope

any
do

refer

not

now

at

which

on

of lati-

relative

These

are

the

I

as

pleasure,
first

They

where the
all

ately

of what

as

they found ;

ordered the

next

main,

whither the 2d

thirty

some

that

the

would

nearer

to

Just before

not

the

der,

When
one

2d

but

;

to

one run-

pole,

run

lower

faster

towards

account

and

hear that

never

northwardly and empty

run

any faster

ocean run
was

true, its

of the rivers which

After

we

The only

find

not

small

last

to

board,

plan

a

outside of the

to

the

to

other

escape.

as

if

by

of the

and the boat

ship,

finally made

the

on

various

to

take

&amp;c.

pirates,

without molesta-

few

a

sent

with

people

the

The

one

the

without

shot,

The

report.

pirates'

southward

be the

or

up

aquil, When
for

mate

their boats'

were

discov-

and with

by

and

one,

hun-

a

returned

pirates

judge

or

came

to

port, and
immedi-

were

jury.

Margaret Scott

Such

of the

was

at

coast

captain

George Howland
not

is
in

Guay-

left the

The fate of the

crews, is

as

board the

on

George Howland

these islands.

and first

case.

circumstance which shall deter-

the

boats

pointing down directly

steamer

landed

to

interesting

"sold,"

were

ordered,

soon as

board,

Upon this, they
the

them, they surrendered,

steamer.

on

on

the steamer, and demand-

surrender.

were

at

purpose
hundred soldiers
on

a

instantly surprised by
they

they

success,

out

Being concealed,
to

the pirates

small steamer, which

a

had but

had been

boldly approached

ately

coast,

Being emboldened by

take the

as

and

depredations,—taking

vessels, robbing,

they supposed

This

rescue.

pursued.

not

arriving

but which

they

the

to

ac-

were

executed,

successfully

was

be
or-

ship, painting,

fall overboard

to

was

attempted

into the the

would be

pas-

pirates

green,

than others.— the hands of the American Consul

opposite

run

was

concerted with

mate

astern

and

(he upon

of its

the great rivers of North America and Asia
which

board, number-

on

the execution of which

but dred loaded muskets

:

On

Spanish

a

the coast, the

boat and go

a

was

thirteen ed her
no

concerned

We

with

which they took and

which

in

the

on

and board.

the equator;

of the earth

centre

more.

in

reaching

on

of them

off,

no-

stopped

passes,

lo

on

board.

Spanish

forty souls, mostly

or

ship,

painted black,

plan

prevent-

ofIhe earth

flowing

faster

the

sengers.

fell far

down

are

one

run

the

atlracted

being

down

people

on

proceeded.

mate

the coast,

near

for

ship

fell

they

Island,

the

plundered

and returned

They

passage

Chatham

to

massacred indiscrimin-

Spaniards

they wanted,

thirteen miles up hill, ery that

running

and

up

proceeded

to

the north

would

of instant death.

pain

on

ship
navigate her at

to

ob-

of

plane)

pole

mate

Ihe

order

from the equator

running

theorize,

than the other
far

lo

north

although

first

miles,

true

and ordered the 2nd

board.

on

took

board,

on

few sail-

a

cooper

cident, when the 2d mate, with the rest,

rivers, (supposing

on a

went

third

deserted her,

and

only

and

proceeded

when the

her,
crew,

mate

carpenter

Spaniards

descent of the tion.

river

boat's

ashore,

crew

one

centre

a

take

to

his

there Americans

should take

any

occurs

from the equator

this hill which
run-

to

of rivers

possibility

the other from

as

the

ors,

ing

The

crew.

stopping

On

we

Thus—two

poles.

the

ning

miles

up hill.

running

boat's

many of the

so

the second

leaving

tho

in

ashore with his boat.

ship

with

mate,

habitable

the

the flow of the river is

as

towards the

neither is it increased committed
up hill direction,

an

up But if this

mountain, thirteen miles high,

vast

of the earth

There is another

seek Arctic

piled

in

land.

consequences of

modons

being

a

the

to

star-

ashore

went

Spanish convicts, fully armed,

schooner

inhabi-

where

place

change

no

sea

deso-

by

few

a

we

his

with

securing

that would ordered the

tain the great and desirableend

earth, it
be
may

and find

subject,

one

and

lying

the

or

of (he

(he

forty-filth parallel

being

mile, (if possible,) north pole

notions of the power of grav-

and of the

level.

running
is

and

of

out

at

for

Gallapagos,

Cromwell

under the massacred all the persons

being

sun,

to

parts
and

dry

and

hemisphere,

would be little

which the
one

the

;

just

as

prove

miserable death

a

side of the

of the

islands

the

of the

American

touched

immediately seized and tied

was

went

After

left,

be

equator

become

water

of country

that

mostly

surrounded by

There would be hut

in each

tude,

would

and

sand

heat of the

a tract

of the the

ocean,

is

of

want

over

the

1852,

fate awaited the first mate, who subse-

lie between their

whjch

(he

near

the inclination which
into

four thous-

level, it

examine the

world,

countries

ocean,

salt and

reality country through

level, whereas

centre

one

:

level.

us

pre-conceived
ity,

as

a

pole

about three and

find ils

lo

say

be

ing

hill.

up

some

thus while the river

we

the

speaking

and feet above the level of the
(o

miles and

he taken

(o

happen,

lofty mountains, rising

of

of

would die

place

nf its

(6 IU-OOths,)

ten

ocean

source

reduces the distance

arithmet-

place

miles

I have been

the fact is, that its

third miles,

for

some

about

at

river in

But there is another thing
consideration.

an

above

Mississippi

all

desert,

now

inhabit would

now

position

of the earth than the

23-90ths,)

(10

to

of the

we

Some time about the

Howland

one

Capt.

quently

find their

above Ihe ocean, would

desert

a

north of the

degrees

By

is, and that its mouth is

pole

passing

Tho Miss-

ocean

fraction

a

centre

countries

were

equator,

of the

George

together

same

of latitude, would be buried The

barren

see

be the (ops

is either

centre

line

a

find that the

we

process,

centre

equator, would ac-

about

empties

twenty-nine degrees
ical

we

appearing

tants

are

distance

thirteen miles up hill !

latitude, and

a

cen-

ense

from (he

and therefore

;

from the north

and

dry

which

merely scorching

these :—it is well known lhat from the

rush

of the consequences of

nothing

standing still,

receding

vation.

Now the facts in

at

the

of the earth.

tre

and

to

depopulation

while the countries

the

late

denote that the motion is away from the

to

to

it.

(o

used

as

they

is easy

fact, though

theories in (he world be
The words

and

case,

but it

:

towns

calamity

a

February,

recruits.

towards the fast,

course

surrounding

that latitude and Ihe
on

in any

happen,

to

would decide
show

first,

at

seem

the

of

axis, Charles Island,

of which

Gallapagos,

ship

middle

but whale

the

at

before heard.

not

north and south his boat and

running

their

cities and

forty-five degrees

a

It may

its

on

in the flood, and its inhabitants would

Mississippi River
up

rivers

end in the

say

perish,
"Does the

must

six

the earth's
of

the

to

turn

destroying

I say,

In consequence it

ideas,

some

containing

slop turning

it

slate ;

level.

article in the report of the commit-

upon (he

tee

the

deluging

back,
and

following

and

equator, would

the

form

same

piracy

had

would rush fromils unnatural
position

sea

poles,

of the Is-

religious prospects

were

for I sup-

earth,

semi-fluid

a

the equator, back

at

of vital im-

o(her subjects

discussed.

were

in

that of st

alone,

water

the

to

has the

body

have taken when

from the palrons of (he Board the

not

to

Is-

the

not

the oblate form

gives

the with-

to

missionaries, who

in (he U. S(a(es.

portance

regard

I know that it is

changes

derive their support from the

to

and

lands,

In

taking place

are

of the

consequence

13

1862-

JUNE,

with

known.

ning of rivers
any
is,

From the above facts and others of
up hill ; for rivers are like mine this, is the height of its source above
a simother bodies of
water, (he only difference the ocean level compared with its length, and ilar character that have come to the know-

one

water

up

end
is

of the

waler

is caused
earth

as

being comparatively elevated,

caused

by

at

the

whirls

it

centrifugal force
because

at

motion.
t

that

The

descend.

to

the

equator,

centrifugal
on

is

its axis

greatest

place

is

;
at

the

we

(he the

heaping

face

all know,

force

of (he

and

that this

the

equator,

of the

country

through

which

it

flows.

ROBERT W.

May

14th,

ANDREWS.

1852.

ledge

greatest real ed

to

in

the

Capt. Eldridge,

are

indebt-

of the Am. whale

ship

Margaret Scott, for the following particulars

would

seem

and

Gallapagos,

once

Pacific—We

public recently, it

piracy, murder, robbery

and
Piracy

of the

that this hot-bed of

plunder

at

visited by
broken

traints

as

the

up,

will

or

subjected

make

it safe

touch there without the risk of
and their

crews

should beat

national armed vessels

some

lo

such

res-

for vessels

to

being seized,

murdered.— [Polynesian.

�THE

14

few

haustion, a

Huss

H. C.

gives

other

Pllitinn of the

results

of numerous

post

m

which

by

viz

changes noticed,

small blood

find the follow-

we

:

ihe brain

veueli of

and

spinal

His mother

in-

extremely

was

before

years

in the brain,

to her

and

staggers

cles

arc

THE

OF

REPORT

EXAMINING COMMITTEE.

his birth and died

he

often

globules

lost for

at the mode of

its

acting

tion of the stomach

to

shall

find that

the tone and

improve

Thus the

with

re-

one

and he

In the

I trips

of his

speaking,
falls

for

of what
or

if

committee,

language of the

connected

passed. of their duties.
side is

hitch

and

feel

Long

not

are

with

about, a

liv-

I

Barrows,

would

offer my comments.

shrink

from the

not from

in their

in

interest

native

of common

cause

made rapid

committee

duty assigned
of

discharge

have elapsed since

oflearning

the

Although

advances.

pros-

of the

unaware

and academical education has

school

and

sensible of the

faithful

a

years

the institutions

left,

they

attendthe

condition

They

but

conferred,

honor thus

ataokr,

Kcv. Mr.

institution.

responsibility

the

upon

report

to

exhibition of the Royal

land, and during this period, the

himself

drags

the

if

two

or

one

to

obliged

and to

pects of

down.

minute

a

or,

examination and

recent

school,

mus-

the others.

crcnture

poor

of

muscle,

is

L

is arrested in the

unconscious

monument of his mother's

ing

condi-

effect must

directly opposite

a

of small

operation

dilute, we

in tho act

utterly

instant,

an

wringle along
look

jaw

strong

a

body.

The motions
his

he remains insensible

and is afterwards

watery

habit of

stumbles, perhaps

Oftcner the command of
in

others.

we

walk.

his lips

act of chewing,

j

Red and white softening of the spinal chord.
Blood
in some cases and containing fatty

doses of Alcohol however

acquired

his

in

from his mother

suddenly checked,

Sometimes

Fatty, granulated ■chnrna, and nutmeg livers,
Etfiuions of serum

to have inherited

seems

walking,

Chronic inflamation of the stomach.

instead of

—

for several

:resemblance

marrow.

When

33.

F., aged

'temperate

a

He
the

us

examinations

ing among

body, Bid

Muscular vigor is impaired by a
continuing for a few mm- i of delirium tremens.
The undersigned were appointed a
affection of his nervous
system which gives
again renew the infuriated strug- isingular
the
and
drunken man.
contemhim
air, gait
shocking for our
a picture too
appearance of a
by the Minister of Public Instruction,

glcs, affords
plation.
Dr.

of

and

again

mortem

the resto-

suffering,

1852.

JUNE,

mind;

of

flighty activity
utes, to

of

exclamations

and natural condition

a calm

ration to

FRIEND,

instinctively

them, still

to
the

it

of

is

edu-

subject
gastric
"In the vast retinue of curses that follow the footimpairing by dilution
cation, for they would feel sorry to confess themthe mucous cost of the stomjuipo. 2d, by exciting
steps of the inebriate, none to mc seems so deeply so
selves uninfluenced by that bigs-toned public senach to over action, which must be followed cither by totally horrid as idiocy.
It is painful to see tho
timent, which pervades the foreign community at
inflamation, congestion or torpor, in either case afJudge taken froTn the bench, the finished scholar;
the
fecting the secretions essential to healthy digestion.
from the Professor's chair, the man of God from thci the Sandwich Islands, upon
all-important subfirst from its

sult,

into the

lly absorption

3.

system'and mingling

with the current of tho circulation

prison
its

ing

the

force

in

a

great degree

and

system

nervous

to be followed

unhealthy action,

depression.
Until recently Physiology
count

satisfactorily
The

tWity.

has

dogs

elective

lioe,

and

the

nerves

amount of the

His

blood

of

l)r.

of

the

When

the

tried.

that intellect

is

epilepsy,

idiocy

ac-

po-

the bride

his

matter,
gang-

pro-

wonder

convulsions, paralysis,
are

the

before

cringe

fire in tho

hus-

monster

a

More

mournful

is

feebly Crying

straw,

of its unconcious

ear

famish-

in

-if public

school

It is

shocking

the

gashes,

to

every

of

words

and the

gore

made sick at heart as
or

the
gaze into

all

disease

hang
in

as

cell

alcohol

short of

to

the

sent its

baa

idiocy

pe&lt;t house,

a

!to

Those

blight

but certain

poison.

That the abuse of alcohol has

tem ofpracticc.hiiving
sense to

of the

be

an

eulogy,

the

especially

King,

School,

Royal

upon

per

an-

volumes

of

of land

it is

of

and

government,

The valuable piece

for the site of the

dollars

of the Minister

efficiency

Instruction.

teacher

a

(sl,.r &gt;(lG)

the

of

praise

in

thousand

handsome

a

facts which speak

are

education

unanimous

near ten

employ

cause

congra-

Public

selected

understood.

whither jwas obtained from the King, and the funds expendthe
were drawn from the treasuvictims.—Hut () !
ed

to

premises,

upon

the

prospects
the

drown
her

on

of the

with ry

body

and

heart

throne,

this

endured !

is under

the superintendence

of

graduate

of Williams' college,

IT.

The institution
Mr.
S.

Beckwith,
is

A.and

school,

nation.

Hawaiian

or

a

designed

the

to meet

in

academy,

Honolulu,

wants
open

of

to

a

faugh

the chil-

which

ardent,

It has been

must be

said that

resorted to,
among
the

repress
It

was

insunitu,

results
has

we

must in

very many

In

in

of alcohol in

into

been
to

with

details.

Prom

26

have

on

fully told, till

the

victim
and

hasty

glanced

cause

insanity.
cent,

per

a

few

of

the

here

evils

sensual and

permitted trace

Wo could show

Europe by

its

attack

our

army

its direct

fellow

of

sphere

an

of

given we

which cluster

senseless habit.

the influence

millions

of

the

of 100,000

of alnoble

made

influence.

culm self

regrettingthe

is

on

its

and milir within

by

gigantic

nutcfcsrclcs
inodesßcc

condition

with

rapidity
engulphcd in its

the immediate

the

seourfty, the

unfortunate

belagS hurryhv;

wretched

it

maelstrom of Christendom:
in

(ailing annually

devastating power,

beings

to

ofthe

the

moral
are

re-

declares

that

alcohol

Is not this

stamp

but

paves

evil ?

Can

exhibitng
us

as

the
the
we

the

Yes !

self.

centre

ed with

to

say

terrific

future

to our

men to go

imut be

said,

disease

Ed,

vision,

forward

for

the

stops

offspring
idiocy;

Legislature

drunkards here
ami!

an

without the

throwing

and

to

prompt

onward,

nw/tf but

in raise the
and the

curse of

the

and

bounds,

is but

life

lines

honest

sphere
for the

wrecker

cruising

rescue

of

ore

are

evil falls

not

in

him-

many

coses

visit-

those withon

by

the

drunken

temperate parents.

We select a casefrom

Dr. Howe's

in this

Let

save.

blessings

glorious

of

work

us

however

and extend the

ing, Declamation

and

The Committee

desirable,
deed

it,

us

well

pupils

dividual

not

us

as

have not

tiioy

general

sonic

would

not

of humanity.

may

in-

prepared to do
the

previously visited

remarks

in-

not be

school:

inappropriate.

will indicate
following facts,
successful, —the teachers

without

only

Each session

pupils diligent.

at !) A.

weariness,

M.

was

or lack

of

of

pro-

inter-

until 2 o'clock, P. M.
positive pleasure
the exhibition, commencing at 7 o'clock, was

est, but
while

with

continued to

the

house, until past
nection

the

un-

to

feel

not

the examination commencing
tracted

be

that it would

has been

and the

faithful,

aware

particularize
having especially excelled ;

as

that the school

with

audience,
had

school

manifest delight
10

these
was

been

appeared

o'clock

facts,

in

it

the

should

repeatedly

of

a

crowded

he

its

assured,

"

every

and

con-

added, that
special

no

made for the examination,
in

In

evening.

but

day working

Tho committee think the classes

cease to

onward

to

Head-

History, Geo-

Ancient

invidious,

as

helping hand, Geography, Physiology,

tbo saved will cheer

studios

Grammar,

Music.

are

the committee

effort
we

of the

paid:

th'

dress."

in Reading,

History, appeared

re-

the

meThey highly approve ot
the teacher in
thod of mutual criticism, adopted by

markably

well.

exercises.—

reading, as well as some of the other
of the carrier-pigeons
for teachMr. Beckwith has adopted a new system
by Sir John Ross in his Arctic expedition,
that it was
ing spelling, and the committee regret
report of Dr. with the understanding that thty were to be sent
the examination.
It is
not more fully developed in
home in the event of his finding Sir John Franklin,
parents.
By
branch of primary education to which they feel
Of those exarrived in Glasgow.— a
or of his being frozen in, have

1-3 of all the idi-

meant notorious sots.

not 1-4 had

only

with

about

had

not

only

cannot

wonderingcry

Arithmetic,

Spelling,

on

of the outer current,

of moderate drinking which in.
Who will not seize a
and
be drawn
rope
drunkenness, as an unmitigated board the good ship tkmperance, and bo saved ?
without
the
and
vail
more,
raising
Those who scout our efforts and coll us Pirates

ots in the .State of Massachusetts
Howe

the

Society

to

innocent

the

Our

outline

been

graphy, Natural Philosophy, Physiology, Compoof
drawmaps, Perspective
sition, Latin, Drawing

The statement of the

practice
way

drunkarS\

His

of

murdering thought.
,
mind and body sulficicn

cause r

more

on the

disorgan-

reason, and

poisoning

Temperance

our noble

posesses the power of

has

unhappy

fatal

foreign extraction.

an

but

our

mind, dethroning

ung

to

as

extend

we

ing,

is

attention

which

of

puils

fellow

following

drinkers:

exciting cause.
quickly to be
circling eddy—but
investigations farther, we will still not fearing for themselves—yet each
year more
find that
the remote or pre-disposing cause to an exthan 100,000 of their number, approachingnearer and
tent perhaps quite equal to that given, would be nearer at
the treacherous
current, aic
every circuit of
fairly dcduuible.
swallowed
of intemperance and
up by the whirlpool
Yes, ray friends, testimony, the most conclusive, lost, forever lost.
If

favored
The

sketch

imperfect

at but

the

of North America.

savages

in

be added that

unborn.

cohol in the extermination

posing

113 Lunatic

1-2

it

yet

the victims of this

around

of lions of

which

this

of

of

reports

America

what

operandi

the connexion

production

of the

some

production
give only the

the modus

the

effort is not

In the

the

to

me

can one

sec

We could if time

examined

permit

and

Europe

are credited to it

has

purpose,

cases, exist between

examination

on

have

understand

can

legitimate effect,

Asylums

for the like

said upon

alcohol,

and its

to

entering

been

good

the effects is made

or

of their horso riders.

intention

but time will

already

life toomuch

administered.

the

the influence

without

early

forcibly
same practice

Jockeys

growth

my

minuteness
of

evenin

endure to

effect in hind-

some

either with the taste

pleased

Put how

of

shocked,

hall of lunatics,

one's

the mind

and only jar
contemplated, may be

sorrow

the

see

the

erection of

hundred

is the

joyful

guardians of

expend

to

in the

and then to

of fifteen

the

of

maniac,

fill

sable,

in

startled,

by the

of

to

of the victim

arc

walk

we

grated

inebriate,

agonies
We

earth and heaven

may be

fruitful

in

falls

this,

the

murderer.

hear

good feeling to

opinion

edifice,

salary

It

young.

occasion

encouraged by

are

($10,000) dollars,

drunken

mother.

the

and the

the authorized

Honolulu,

voice

of

education

herj tulation, that

wealth,
over

ot the

ject

Jof honest pride,

contemplate tho act, how can one dren of both Efawaiians and foreigners.
During
tite'vork of blotting out miml —of extinthe last term, the whole number attending, has
guishing with alcohol that scintillation of Deity in
been 63, about one fifth of whom were Hawaiisns,
ering the growth and development generally of the every man, that makes him a living soul r This busiand it afforded, the committee unfeigned gratificahuman body
be proved
when
is
analogy.
ness
may
oj
of itvtoxicating,
perfected In idiocy,
which these
tion to witness the triumph,
For the purpose of repressing the growth of dogs
young
shooting the very substance the vitality of thought
but to commence
the
we have
Ilawaiians bad achieved, in acquiring the English
with jmisonrd atrotct.
It is aiming fatal Mali-, at man's
early in dealing out to
and notwithstanding numerous obstacles,
rations and we shall be able to stint mental
existence.
It is assault and battery on his I mgii ige,
pup regular grog
his growth.
The
will at first object to this
with their more
pup
sysAnd the horrid the awful nature of the contesting the palm of scholarship
immmiidity.
of this slow

progeny

among

hovel

a

see

this traffic

in the

of alcohol

we

and

her

beauty,

returning from the retailer.
the child on its pallet of

it to

intoxicated

experiments

need

her

to shiver in

tower

sort of
oaths and foul

larger

power

the gutter
and
groggcry,
It is pitiable indeed, to

I

circulation.

a

with

part

to

for food and

ac

appreciable

an

the

in

drunkenness.

of

home, her station,

upon

the

same time

brain;

that

a

nervous

gives

upon
consider the

and

see

to lie

desk,

grave

num.

made

general

we

dethroned;

mania

to

alcohol

marrow,

which

to thus localize itself upon the

loss

there exists

than exists at the

animal

and

a

Percy

spinal

alcohol from

of alcohol

at

to themselves

attract

and

centres to increased

alcohol and

the

brain,

brain
undue

sacred
the

corresponding ing babes,

a

which

power

of these substances

analysis

wore

between

affinity

is, that

an

its

spend-

band

nervous

experiments

by

has been

elicited the fact that

that

portion

the

for

the

exciting

of

sesscs

the

upon

them to

exciting

and

want

u

report

Wonderful

taken

Instinct.—Two

out

This eVent is the
,

No.

68
I by

sight

and not

mora

by

wonderful, as these

scent.

birds travel

as

if too

much attention could

not be

paid.

Numerous neatly drawn maps suspended around

�of the
the school-room reminded the committee
bors of the former teacher, Mr. Fuller, and a
allusion

py

made

was

to

has

learn

teachers, and the committee
the

that

cised

pupils,

in the

soon

as

In compositions,

made,

their good
suited

taste

simplicity

general

in

of praise,
the

witheld

hill!
up
committee rejoice

the instruction of teachers in
and

in this

sole

whose

business

the school.

fact, that

he has

and most

useful

do the

It is

of

members

who

school-room

To

a

be

more

struction

doubtless be

most

The committee

Instruction

also

sistants.

which

other

to

with

learn,

well

to

are

gratifying

that

survey

A

take

we

sustaining,
the

and

ot

her

institution at
of

the

Mr.

public

sentiment

which

must at

no

and

the

every

O'er

They
and

increase

or

schools—the Royal,

already

35

of

mg

unless

motto,

us

stand,

sure

a

nor

"

a

hill

with

mass

with

harsh,

pen

in

down two

"

it,

for the

sulphureous

horrid

oppressed,—as

deep

in

glare,

found,

and

rough

wild

of

ground,

stony base,

new

and

frightful

noisy steam,

flames arise and torches
the

sweep

gleam ;

burning

some

their

falling

soul

gathering

awful

Oread

to

veil

masses

sits amidst the

the

high,

sky.

covered

of the

45

She

life,

Line

28.

fierce flames and

the

to

spins

mystic

her

winds

the glistening, glassy

thread,

high-

hark!

And

leap again

Fresh

masses

torrents

spreads

Now

Then all
Rocks

fountain

lied.

along

the

sky:

the

ground,

devastating lake,
their

streams

melt before

the

soul

the heat and

different

courses

appall,

J. F.B. Marshall.
WilliamL. Lee.

55

Great

an

Mauna

Kea,

forests fall.

with crown of

glittering

the

pumice

liquid

than

more

force an

the air

and

Ihe

lava

air

"

the viciuity of the crater,

oncemost

"

was

no one

upon

from

strange

the

gloss

every

49.

they

were

by

former

the natives

goddess
times,

lava

The lara and scoria

50 feet

during
roaring
a

less

than

24

of

ap-

Pete's

the wind

or 40

miles.

abundantly

in

crater.

falling over

some

on

the

more than

places

hours; making

of Niagara or the

rock-bound

"

called

jets by

llilo, 35 miles from the

like

to

power.

scattered

in

point

and beautiful.

threads,

liquid

col-

bosom, pro-

dreadful

dared,in

peculiar

fine

their

a

velocity,

immense

considered

be

the crater and
caused

sometimes to the distance of 30

streets of

upon

lava

with

clouds

from the

occasion

the

hot

rise

state to

45.—The

borne,

.almost constantly

were

in

converging"

the scat of her

spun

op

and

high,

in effect.

to

fleecy

effect at

are

thrown

feet

70S

great heat produced by

and

which

stones

winds.

diameter at the base.

sides of the crater, raised it

breaking

of

a

noise

a

heavy

coast.

55.—Mauna Kea rises
and

just opposite this
covered

with

crater

perpetual

snows.

Line
side

snow,

great

showers

constant

of

43.—" Pele

volcano,

surf

the

crust, must

highest jets

fresh currents

Line

the

side,"

being too great

off by the

nearly 14,000 feet high

inspiring

Saml. C.Damon.

The

bearing

Line
still

to

were

of rurilicd

hair,"

in

masses

which

to the

and fountains of red

Line

round,

—

uniting

The

crater

Line 39.

proach

earth-

they only

mountain's

and carried

37.—Whirlwinds

On this

high-

the crater

pour

wide and

narrower

take

success.

fiery

roaring

a

liquid

thunders rend

falling pile

have
Now

the

the

into

again loud

And

Huge
50

down

which

stone which filled

sometimes most fearful

and

plunges

Then

up

100 to 300 feet in

the

of

island, producing

point.

29,—Allude

27,—Alludes

Line

and

"

sounds

"

mountain

weaker

pumice

in their heathen

burning air,

be-

the ground.

Line

throws

liquid

above,

and

were thrown

duced

deadly strife

of

runs

undoubtedly producedby the

was

and

cinders

hair;

and

Charity

meet in

ruin threatens every

Pele

Breathes

be sent

who

the lurid

the elements
Where thus
And

some

Lines 27

while
en

Kau,

out

the valley

to

this

on

of the

bursting

ground;

the clouds

whirl

existence

pledge offuture

to

storsss of

ashes fill the

miles

chilling fear,

of the

strength

from the

some

in

and

station,

trace.

we

land

comprehend.

occurring during our stay

thick clouds of smoke

given :

cry,

pleasant

a

three

threatening stream.

and

be

near,

Heaven,

strength rely.

the mission

of the mountain

Line

flow in

His

deep, rumbling

eruption

opening at

o'er the

mound and chasm

Convcrgina&gt;«urrcuts

Professional education.

forth

and

Waiohinu, means "shi.

name,

or

can

25. This

the late

caverns

tide;

terrific

burning torrents

grace

our

to

shining rill," which gashes

peculiar sensation

rock-ribbed

the

to

on

given to

above

ls&gt; The

Line

tongue

lava

saving

and

Him,

It is

who have felt

behold

we

and

help

shocks arc often felt
quake

umn

population,

Punahou, and

sent

act up

"Excelsior."

of

top

round,

educa-

for the

bed.

low.

a

poet's

glowing

a

whirlwinds

While

sons

rilled

with doubts

threatening dangers

Father listens

immense pressure

molten

a

fear

By day,

would

influences in

head,

within its

mournful cries

our

The Native

1.

water."

account of

the

land,

mid barren
we

fly hissing through

melting

Wild

are
confident this
members of the committee
follow if the pupils of the
much desired result will

School fully

top

awful scat,

mountain's firm and

falling now

By night,

con-

The

Royal

and

raise

we

trust

us

of cinders

The lava

the busientered honorably and successfully upon
May these examples prove but a
life.
ness of
earnest, and

storm's

the

—

discern

can

day, call into

to complete theirstudies

plea'slng

we

dream

and her

higher seminary of learning.
to
daughters of our land, must not continue

schools have

wood

•

shoots

With

that

energy

some

grade ofa University

neither

gushes forth

30 Swift rolls its

40 And

The

abroad

realm

filled, before

which

bursts the

High

the school

of

her

stream

toilsome

our

source,

o'er ■ scathed

It is quite

in

interests

elements

distant

dreary

as-

Ann

Royal school,

Punahou.

certain

this

pitying

Bids

roll,

air—

whole

department

quarter.

forth

putting

character ofthe

tendency

A

Line

While rocks

are most forcipart of the world, they
of vigorously
bly impressed with the importance

elevate

world, when

wail,

flowering rale

soul.

our

tangled

side,
And

the

continued,

be

and

foot above

forth his

Thus in

That needed

fly,

hath told 1

Pub-

to lenrn

hill

shed."

pity

her mournful

complaints,

threatening

ning

lightning's

old crater's horrid

scene

25 Here

this

tion in

her sad

stretching

bubbling
the

With wonder

part of the

to become

pupils
know, that
forward as teachers.

committee

an

And

as

chills

thy hoary head,"

tears of

some

weep,

every stream and

In tears

sky,

arrows

inspires

awe

com-

qualified

former

to

coming

As the

On

a

will

flood—

terror

and

down from

Kea,

to

Confines the

streams

to $8 per

$10

from

seek

of in-

the

devote

the Primary department.
in this
announced that the tuition
reduced

a

pleased

will

the school,

Father

From sins within and

70

night,

beneath the surface

steep, through

And, wandered

the

schools,

transfer

time to

Our

the distant

lightning

Far down the mountain's
to

will
M. C. Dimond's services
is about
Miss Fowler, who

nected

of

limbs

are

retreat,

nothing

general system

and that

est

the

inspired,

thus

2f&gt; Old Vulcan's

Being ardently

numbers, the Minister of

committee

The

We

has

and

pleasure,

than

rejoice

disposed

is

a

naturally imparts

upon

duties of teaching

onorous

the

sights

dark and solemn

breast and

rugged

O'er

beneficial.

in

school increases

sister

and awful

on

honorable,

(nullified

as

her

all

scene

course,

much cordi-

approval

the hearty

influence

its

mitee, and

are

the

gloom

our

And,

work

services during the

resort.

His

desirable.

the

well

he

meets

the

welcome

a

profession,
study to.his pupils,

devoted to his
for

with

And

feet.

—

hears

Line

in

remarkable degreehe

delightful

a

found,

her seat,

in

at his

descending, burning

workman that needeth

making study

in

succeeded

are

sea.

blood,

prone

From

yonder-mountainheight,

on

Deep, rumbling sounds
Fear fills

committee

his

he is "a

ashamed."

be
not to

be

15

in-

now

through

Athwart the

alongcourse

noble,

a

the

shown, by

has

months, that

last six

after

and

profession,

aware

self-Bacraficing

and

and recommend Mr. Beckwith

teacher,

are

He

around,

quiet,happy

thunders echo from

Loud

of

confidence)

devoted his life,

of teaching the young.

Miss

we

Or listen

would

committee

They

the important

of study to

lic

lurks

Not

dear retreat.

holiness

and

ever

heard

are

thy

force,
tho

the

of

can

this

beyond

gaze

instruct

to

65
crown

I

Oh

greet,

department.

Principal

love

it is

breathing

traveller

weary

where peace

as

Oread sounds

For,

Acad-

and

her

fiery

humbler

and trembles

weeps

the swift

sees

and

fear,

en-

Mr.

Ililo

A tremor seizes

"

the

exposed

glow,

danger free.

o'er the

majestic

more

milder

a

every

seen,

branch usually co/ifided

a

report,
closing
full
frankly acknowledge their
In

ality

10

combine among their
of an ability to teach the

in

It

of music.

Professor,

of

of

do

Rarely

high schools,

fail,

never

odors

thy flowers, sweet

envious demon

So too,

States

that

qualifications,

Vet,

con-

like

music,

predecessor.

the ordinary

in

structors

his

emies of the United

science

well

themselves, in having their children

gratulate

other

science

may

She

pleasures

peaceful joys still

Some

■

-

,

smiles

gushing of thy shining rill,

hospitality

And

to witness the proficiency

The patrons of tho school

Beckwith

a

the defense

to

making in the

are

pupils

the

which
music.

5

a

tribute

run

The

joy

topics

of the Mississippi

waters

the

that

And

'■

Kind

sublime, from

vale.

thy lovely

still,—

the com-

just

a

is

its humble

And bloom

depreciate

least to

not te allude

they

were

theory,

river

the

would feel that they

mittee

! may

Ne'er cease the

been

with

treated

of the compositions,

character

Oh

from nature.

has

sits

While,

*

*

exer-

selection of

were

Such, Waiohinu,

high degree commenda-

a

without wishing

ble,
the

to

which
in

and grace,

*

wild light reflects

Still
on

60 Sweet

elegance, and

with

their ability,

to

be

beginning

good

a

pupils write
appeared in the

the

of

many

will

of sketching

art

desirable

pleasure,

*

*

both

with

possible,

as

Fragment

unpublished Poem,

Hawaii.

considerable attention, under

received

of an

Beck-

r.

pupils' indebtedness
Perspective drawing

predecessor's labors.

his

For the

For the Friend.

la-

hap-

M

subject, by

to the

with, who acknowledged his

15

1862-

JUNE,

FRIEND,

THE

of

60.—Hilo is

a

lovely district

Hawaii, presenting

a

fine

on

the

picture

windward

of

tropical

�THE

16

embellished

scenery,

by

mountain torrents, with

with

covered

luxuriant

a

and

fruit trees

plants,

and

constantly fresh

67.—This

Line

tected from the

Kea

Mauna

late

which

almost

by

region

eruption by

terrible

off above

shoots

From Mr. James
BUNG AT THE ANNIVERSARY OP THE ROYAL HA

a

Roll

Rr

on

Cook, $5 00,

and

Then hither life

on man

Bond,
of th*

Married.
In

Honolulu, June 3rd.,

;

Miss

bestowing.

He bade him labor, and

Iter. E.

■

beast,

view

on

Friend.

! roll on ! proclaimed the Power,

It lay beneath Its maker's

debt

liquidate

circulation

gratuitous

That spake this planet into birth,
and bird, and flower
II on! and

'Twaa done ! with lire and beauty glowing,

Puna.

to

and

general

Shall wake to deck and bleu the earth.

of

spur

towards

Hilo,

From Mr. A. S.
*/&gt; 00, for

pro-

Ludlow, $10

Chapel.

WAIIAN AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY, JUNE Ist, 18M.

showers.

actually

Donations.

ORIGNALON.
ODE.-ROL

kept

are

daily

was

1852.

JUNE,

gushing

flowering

of

vegetation

green

of

foaming cascades, and

heavy forests,

beautiful

which

number

large

a

their

FRIEND,

subdue.

C

Mary Lawrence,

both

Mr.

to

of

Wm. H. Taylor,
Honolulu, by Kcv.

S.

at his residence.

Damon,

fi.

Destructive

Fire.

On! on/! speed on!

spoken,

to man was

When Eden far behind him lay ;

ESTIMATED
On
the
has

of the

Monday morning
destructive

most

and extensive

with

destroyed, together

valuable stock

portant

of

The

the upper story of-the
in

tunately succeeded
The

the

on! bear

To

light you

Then

flames

in

Success shall

in

the

to

the

And Hawaii rise

of

Word

17

eat Borrow

the

row

Subscribers and others.—Our

as

than

larger

list for Honolulu ismueh

subscription

and

before,

ever

in the hearts of all his

the Savior

«rsons
ilu,)

to

who

islands, (but

9

other and

on

remote

be in

now

may

parts

add their

As

a

John

older class

As

scholar,

a

and

teachers,

he

and

was

1840, remember

to

with

his influence

on

&lt;

ifying
visit

the

to

learn, that

to

S.

U.

we

much

two or

In

ihimself

her igave

at

and in her

youth,

na-

,

revered

There she

rounded

cupied

by

she

left

islands,

family friends and

many

superintending

in

the

the

Since

interesting
our return

ter

before

us

the islands

has

perintend

Mrs.

to

D.

the erection of

that

to

a monument

to

much esteemed and lamented husband.

After having

men's

lot,
this

the

in Nuuanu

to do so.

centre

of the

I have

af-

W.

new

now is

to get

HERE

TO

IT.

THE

roS

MOMEWABD
.TATE.

ENJOTMENT
Mora

he

OF

died

"|AND
Ben- fjt,

THE ISA

OATS

Or

THE

Till,

to

on

1841,

WHILE

TOTAOI
IN

THE

for

32d

stanza, expressing

his love

Rut Oh ! I long

to soar,

forget

to

He

at

once

for the

morning,

EBEBATED

day

scale

to

At

one

seven

vary cold

got

the

was

into

a

mo

in

my

the Savior.

It

to

with

one

they

of his

speechless, and

" R.

&amp;.

persevering

spirit

was

WSEE IN

B. Korreb,"

WIDOW

Wave

thc

Prince

in

the

to soar

repeatedly

has phown

tb«t

"CtftVatas.** —lasts
respecting

the rapid

Information Wanted.
If
in

to
on

Capt. Hovcnricn will communicate
Sydney, or to Mr. Thomas Thrum,

castle, ship-builder,
of

but now

something greatly

to his

to his

late

friends

of New-

of Honolulu, he will

hear

advantage.

was

A

oat

Monthly Journal devoted
and

Marine

Seamen,

with two

they

were

Temperance

to

General

,

Inielli'

genet.

overtaken with

on

till

at Wailuku.

they could
Their pur-

could find

PUBLISHED
SAMUEL

C.

unconcious

the

most

conveyed

to

AND

DAMON,

EDITED

One copy
Two

of the

per

copies
copies

"

"

annnm

-

c

notions

-

•

-

■

52,00
3,00

"
"
.....

5,00

Alexander's, when

forth to revive him, but in vain.
put
evening, his breathing ceased and his

gushing

BY

Chaplain.

Seamen's

TERMS.

tor-

against the cold wind,
ne passed
the night

companions

and blinding

interrupted the course of ay peat.

IX

ICP
4.

away and be with the Savior.

sooner, though

or

t&gt;t»t«mcnt

efforts were

free

"

Squill

a

Mr. Editor, that I have exceeded the limits you alknow,
IT." lowed
for this notice; but nt feelings would not suffer me
cae
'
atop

Even under this
rig, slw-

THE FRIEND:

set

they pressed

probably

was

"

* Know

this vessel, which made the pHss;ige from Honolulu
to thin i, nt the
rata of 350 miles
&lt;tt a
speed to
per diem, and
cqusl tho fastest AtlanticSteamer.

Five
be

lop—Us

ssiling of

time.
wu

the third

on

made the pas
refit, nhe kept in her course, and

3(K) miles ! The

from China confirms the

news

of Him,

he spent

Boston,

first class of clipto the
posHiriHcw qurihties, entitling her
Cspt. Be irdnliy thinks tint in quod sailing trim, she
pers.
would h ivo nude the
passage in 90 dnyv.

late, and I

cause

135 days from

in the Gulf stream, was dismasted and
passage,
her throe masts, above the topmasts, hut instead

of returning

The

distant isles

deep ditch formed by the mountain

best shelter

there,

tho hew

of the highest mountain peaks

o'clock

; yet

missionaries destined far

away

thee, Lord;

May

from Boston, Mr. Prut.

Squall,"

she

to en-

Charles, he seemed

30th, be

Snow

sage under "courses and

oh

enthuMasm of

subject of

to

"

"Snow Bq.u*ll,"

of her

ma one il.iv

1

WHIcB

The

carried

from the sphere of mortal joys.

was

\nteloue, Potter, cruise.

PaiiErioEßs, Per

Marine News.

of elevated and holy
joy,—joy
With his whole heart he joined

I love

About 9 o'clock

TEAS .

AOE.
DEAD

one

to

*•

Lyons, San Francisco.

Rev. Mr. Hturgen? und
ludy,
mission to Micronesia.

pious,

sufficient

The last sabbath

Heaven.

"Thou knowest

him

Tbey

Friday
FULL

OHEIITIAN

the

19—Bark

his

education, be

an

t.od prosper

tho

bouses and even the windows

rents,

to
HI.

hopefully

the

Francisco.

Sin

King, San Francixra

having kept him

an education

resign everything

and full of glory.

Early Thursday
[young companions,

He

13.
IIICTID I.

use

motive added strength

not

\u*th;, //oeolulu.
Millu,

18—Sch Maria, //üburn, San Francisco.

That I may love thee mora."

and

DEVOTED

AND

Hit

in

OF HIA

■

AT THII

RISE

lr*

ItßVlci

UNITED

To

sloop Oberon

clared that he could
further.
His companions seem to
go do
have done all that they could do, to encourage and assist him.

Or THI

FAITHFULLY

• H Hit
TO

lOCIETT

AND

decided

a

death he used this lan-

determined, if

am

Ixahclla,

fi'irk

15—Am sh Hero, M'Cleave, cruise.

was
pose
accomplished and they turned their faces homewad,
lie soon complained of dizziness and excessive fatigue and de-

DIELL,

CHAPLAIN

rSSCNO

a

Sea-

or

tin

Br bk Speed, Connell,

ready

ever

the following:

see the

AHEEICAN 18.M.N

rOBT

in singing

her

rain, which

hihoat

BEY. JOHN
riRIT

unspeakable

1

SACKED
to thi

25
sp.*
Tahiti.

tons,

B—Am bk Baltic,
Brook*, cram.
10—Haw sch Falmouth, Wilson, San Francisco.

visited his mother, his hopes of

thought much

a be rapidly ripening

su-

cemetery, and

Valley

Am

whom I love."

This

:—

200 sp.

Janus, Cornell, cruise.

Haw hrig Williclmine,

of his Heaven-

mother.

acquiring

I hope that this is

of Western Maui.

inscription

his

to

required

every

became

had become

A fortnight before his

My desire

Far

stands in

monument

of

and in

long

only of his widowed

of the ocean; and (

fulfil

would

we

nun,

25 day- fm Tahiti.

Lyons, 2J days

I—Brem sh Repuhlik,

and in making him a trophy of grace.

earth is said to have been

bears

so

expectations of

tbink I feel willing

it

27—Am !»h

April
May

at the goodness

education revived, and a

moment.

melancholy pleasure,

a

promise made

unbounded.

From that time, his heart seemed

After the rtaviour became precious

forded

to be

and obediont

death, he

his

spared him

of

daughters.
to

6

Wilson, 24 ds frn Tahiti.

his

especially

parents,

into the vineyard of the Lord, in some of these

i

oc-

"

efforts,

her four

his fond

an

:

guage

education

Falmouth,

s&lt;-li

hirk Speed, Connel,

10—Am bark Antelope, Potter, ft 1-2

he would

died very suddenly : then Charles seemed

his desires.

sur-

been

Baltic, Brook*-, ft 1-2 mos, lt&gt;o,

sh Hero. M'Cleave,

Haw
B—Br

the side of virtue and right.

ever on

vaiastonished

am,

and think

up

'taining
to

since

his

respectful

ever

three weeks after ha

direction.

er

Y.

N.

Pittsburgh,

town,

has resided

he

from
j
outbreaking

late

our

D.

a

their

lieving that his Alia) duties would demandhis efforts in anoth-

home, the home of her
tive

during

Mrs

saw

for they believed that

overflowing with love and gratitude and joy.

ever

his father

for them

to have

lik

Am

I—//aw hrig WilheImiiir, King, //onolulu.
tj— \m

•

About two months

It may be grat-

Mr. Diell.

April 29—Am hk Isabella, Millu,6o ds fm Realijo.

May

ex-

board

on

years

and friend, he was kind, gentle,

a companion

ly Father in having

the Rev.

esteem

sever;.!

in the performance

prompt

who visited Honolu- '

seamen

believe,

wo

had beonmuch
Though he

Br

Diell.

residents

Foreign

youth,

a

LAHAINA.

Arrived.

he had become personally in-

towards whom his affection seemed

own expression,

the islands, and
lv from 1832

of

PORT OF

many excellencies ,

14—Br sloop überuri,

follower of the Lord Jesus.

The

so

such

was

spent

with him;

he loved

son,

mother,

to oblige,

Rev.

via Lahaina.

Newcll, San Francisco.

t Irnred.

Hon-

As

the

He

salvation.

task.

to

M

Cruiie.
'Jti.-j-Am wh sli South America, Walker,

do them good.

See Terms.

Monument

his

faults, ami

evon before

groat

of

list of subscribers.

names to our

sor

i«

that their toss

whale ship, yet parents, who knew him, wished

improve the present opportunity

will

with.

met

loved,

children associate

residing

few

so

evil influences, had

to

cruiMf.

Prancirtco.

.-.tii

May 2o\—Am wh sh Juhn howland, Tiiylor, cruise.

acquaintances ; yet their

by the firm persuasion

A youth, with

posed

those

hope,

we

Hra/li,

20—Am wh hh Hubomok, t allutt, cruise

is mitigated

gain.

San Praia,

Mary Dart-, Mouatt, Ft. Victoria, Van. I.

brig

—Mr

fin

Huston.

Hoyer, SydnnT.

],I—ilaw brig Eagle,

11.

The midden death of this lovely youth, has earned the deep-

terested in the

present

Chaklki

ultu,

aged 17 years.

adjoining buildings.

to

the Slit

ft mos.

/

li'iiml.

Haw brig Eagle,
Newcll,
12—Haw ach Maria, Hohron,

DIED.
on

V alkrr

I«a*s, Marble, ll* d&gt;

Chil. wh ship Pesrador,

is very seldom

A

10—Am Hh Emily,

mm.

17 (Mm Snu Franctrco.

Squall, llur*..« j-*4ru
&lt;

May

11.t.-kin-, 20

days Manila.

end ;

t&gt;

from the dead.

as

mi

Deleter,

Boy,

Arywhire

sch

her banner o'er you,

wave

Harm,

sh South America,

wli

Juno 2d—Am. «h

for-

known.

spread

25.—Am

20.—Haw.

before you,

But onward with unfaltering

the fire department

preventing

I.l—Am wh =sliip ('harlop Frederick,

May 90—Bt ach Royalist,
May M&lt;—Am brig, Swiss

burns steady,

now

from the path

principal

not

May 11—Haw brie Eagle, Newell. fm sea, leaky.,.

your chosen toil;

on

swerve not

HONOLULU.

secure.

on, the plough is ready,

The torch of science

OF

Arrived.

With which to turn the waiting soil;

the

They

is

fire

The efficient services of
resulted

PORT

X

Snow,

room was

rescuing

That maketb his reward

Then

many im-

building.

of the

origin

his way ;

on

pledgeretaincth,

And he who sows, the

At Lahainaluna,

safe.

blessings

large

nearly all

counting

the

Which promised

MARINJ
E OURNAL.

placed that token,

Which told that while the earth remaineth,

place, which

besides

goods,

as

papers,

!

week,

current

took

occupied by Capt.

store

!

!

was

Seed-time and harvest shall endure.

fire

occurred in Honolulu.

ever

was

$40,000

DAMAGES,

And in the cloud

tears

DOLE.

5,

Bound

6, 7 and

redaction

Tolumes

eight

from

the

subscription

Seamen, and purchasers

gle

volume.

Fsibkd, for 1, 2,3
A
Chaplain's Study.

of The

the
years, at

price

who desire

will be made to

more than

a

tin-

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                    <text>FTHE RIEND.

1
New Series, Vol. I, No. I.

_

IHttOLl

1.1. MAY

1, 1832.

Old Series, VOL IV

beyond the income from our subscription list. verse." We occupy a position precisely the
Past experience teaches us not to look upon opposite, our correspondents will favor us,
OF THE FRIEND, MAY 1, 1850.
1 "the dark side," hut judiciously undertake by sending communications in both prose and
Prospectus am! Terms,
1
An appeal to young men absent from home
verse, reserving an editor's privilege of
2 and steadfastly prosecute any enterprize
N'apk Rowland K. Cmcker
either
3
itself
to
the
common
sense
publishing or rejecting them, as he
Volcanic Eruption
which commends
4
Hints to commercial wealth, Editorial
deem
relying
upon
may
proper.
men,
of
good
4 and judgment
Hawaiian Parliament
With
this
and
their
countenance
support.
4
&lt;;eneral meeting
-.
Map of the Ixlands
-I view we shall send forth our Monthly sheet,
An appeal to young men absent
5
Quarterly Report of 11. I. Society
to
a
welcome
visitor
will
6
that
it
go
Whaleman'it Reflections
from home.
hoping
6
CapL Lure's death
every man's dwelling on the Sandwich Every mail brings letters of enquiry resOfficers of 11. I. Temp. Society
- 77 islands; who reads the English language,— pecting long absent sons and brothers who
, Exploration of China Seas
- 7
England and America
hoping that it may find its way to the cabin, have left their homes and friends, but do not
8
Marine News, notices Slc.,'Slc.
steerage and forecastle ofevery Man-of-war, report themselves. No language can ex-j
merchant vessel, and whaleship in the Paci- press the anxiety, grief and sorrow which
THE FRIEND:
fic —hoping that a w copies may fly such inconsiderate young men occasion to
to
abroad to other lands, but wherever it goes, their parents and family-friends. Ye roving,
Temperance,
Journal
devoted
Monthly
A
Seamen, Marine and General Intelli- it is our settled purpose it shall go the friend wandering, thoughtless young men, w(&gt;y will
and advocate of " whatsoever things are you not either return home, or at least comgence.
Contents

- . - ----- - .....
-- - ....
- . -...
...

"

true, whatsoever things are honest, whatso- municate with friends by letter. Is our lanPUBLISHED AND EDITED BY
whatsoever things are guage too strong? Then read that of an anxSAMUEL C. DAMON, Seamen's Chaplain. ever things are just,
pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatso- ious mother, writing from
New HamTER M S
ever things are of good report."
shire:
§2.00
One copy per annnm
The good subject of Temperance will be
r)
"Our son, although he is out of sight, is
3.00
Two copies " "
will never out of mind.
considered,
the
welfare
of
seamen
duly
5,00
He is the last one
Five copies " ''
forgotten, the interests ofcommerce thought of at night, and the first in the
never
be
2,
SCT" Bound volumes of The Friend, for 1, 8. will be made prominent, the spread of mismorning, and is never forgotten at the family
4. 5, 6, 7 and eight years, at the OtfUUt Si'idy. A
will he made to sionary, religious and general intelligence,
redaction from the"subscription pricemore
altar.
He has been the child of many praythan a sinSeamen, and purchasers who desire
will
occupy a proper position. If we fill up ers. I often feel that if so be, I would fly
gle volume.
this general outline, from month to month, it upon the wings of the wind with pleasure to
is presumed our patrons will be satisfied.
seek out the place of his abode. I would
In regard to the terms of our paper, we make his bed in sickness, I would smooth his
shall employ language similar to that of Dr. pillow and cool his fever'd brow, with all the
HONOLULU, MAY 1, 1852.
Smollett, when he issued a newspaper in tender ties of love and affection, perhaps he
London, about a century ago, "Gentlemen, is already beyond a mother's care, &amp;c. Will
Prospectus, new series.
the price of our paper is as low as it can be you try and find him. If you will trace him
With this number commences the republior obtained at any shop in Lon- out and give him information respecting
afforded,
cation of the Friend, which has been discondon."
Past
experience has taught us, tha' us, you will confer a great favor on his anxtinued since February 1851. In the last
entirely for our support up- ious friends."
we
must
not
rely
number issued, the statement was made that
list. We hope to receive For a time our search was in vain, the
subscription
on
a
the paper would be suspended "inasmuch as
to defray the publication young man having changed his name, (a* is
donations,
no one could be found to incur the trouble generous
copies, which we shall alas, the too common practice of sailors and
of
one
thousand
and pecuniary risk of its publication." Havamong the seamen of all roving youth,) but we have finally discovering resumed the duties of Chaplain, it seems scatter broad-cast
in the Pacific, lor in our inter- ed his abode, and shall lose no time in opento be taken for granted that the Friend nations afloat
seamen we know nothing of ing a communication between him and his
among
course
The
reshould again make its appearance.
friends. There would be some consolation
iterated assurances on the part of many, but national distinctions or prejudices.
if this was only one of a few similar cases,
especially of our sea-faring acquaintances, Already have we received some valuable but, alas it is
!
others
be
one of thousands, yes, thouwill
and we hope
that they would cordially support the paper, communications,
sands
of
men are now ashore, and
young
,
have
never
our
editorial
in
(the loss of which they have seriously felt,) forwarded, for we
the
afloat
the
who will nejther write
in
Pacific,
situated
as
were
precisely
encourages us again to undertake its publi- career, been
with them in
their
friends
communicate
Chambers,
editors
of
the
or
Edinburgh
cation. The gratuitous labor and trouble of famous
notice,
issued
a
other
men
absent from
any
way.
when
Our
Young
they
"
editorship, we should not feel, if there was Journal,
not
parents
your
write
will
you
home,
favor
not
sending
why
us, by
not the anxiety, lest at the year's end, a debt correspondents will
Do
immediately.
or
and
friends
it
?
either
prose
in
•
of several hundred dollars would be incurred any communicatioos

.

-------------

tub wumm©.

�THE FRIEND, MAY,

2

1852.

dered the ship, greatly to the chagrin of bluff old-fashioned gentleman who charmed
Capt. Crocker who was bent upon a more by In* good-natured conversation the monotThis veteran seaman and most excellent obstinate resistance. He was tuken a,pris- ony of sea-travel.
man departed (his life on Monday the 12th oner to France where he remained until the There is one class of incidents in the life
cessation of hostilities.
of the subject of this
worthy of special,
Jan'ry iv the eighty second year of his age. His reminiscences of his residence in that! although it must henotice
a brief petition. 'One
To most of our readers, in thfs country and country during the most extraordinary period hundred and sixty-four times did be cross the
in England this venerable gentleman was of ils history, were of a highly interesting broad Atlantic, afid often did he encounter
well known and none who knew him will character. He had taken the great Napo- wrecked and shuttered ships, upon whose
controvert the truth and justice of the follow- leon by the hand ; he had familiarly knnwn fast sinking hulls, the starved and exhausted
Paine at a time when his society was sought seaman had lain down to die, or from which
ing sketch of his character which we copy for and was valuable. Of this noted individ- came the faint cries of despairing and halfual, we may in passing say, with his uniform crazed women. At such times we may say
from the Mercury of the 16th.
"It is not our purpose, nor is it in our and characteristic kindness he always spoke that it was his invariable rule to run every
power to enter into any biographical details in terms which sounded strange to the ears risk, and to rescue the sufferers at every
of the long life of this excellent and venera- of a generation which has been taught with hazard.
ble man, who has just been gathered to his or without justice to regard the author of There was not a particle of selfishness fn
fathers. Such enquiries as we have made, " The Age of Reason " with loathing and his character on sJiore, but at sea, in such
touching his prolonged and checkered ca- abhorrence. He remembered Paine as a emergencies, he w"s almost unmindful of the
reer, have indeed disclosed to us (he fact, well dressed and most gentlemanly man of dictutes of prudence. In a record of such
that many men, more distinguished, and of sound and orthodox republican principles, of rescues now before us, written in his own
larger importance in the world's affairs, have a good heart, a strong intellect, and n fasci- hand, grown tremulous by age, he says, in
hardly furnished more materials for a roman- nating address.
entering an instance of more than ordinary
tic and fascinating narration. During the After his liberation he once more engaged danger : " How little a man knows himself
eighty years of his pilgrimage, he saw many in marine pursuits. In 1807, while in com- when he, sees a fellow being in danger of his
lands, he traversed many seas, he suffered mand of the ship Otis, then lying in the life"—meaning unquestionably thai then the
many changes, he underwent many vicissi- Downs ready for sea, and with a cargo on sense of personal danger is quite lost in the
tudes, and he experienced various fortunes. board valued at £100,000, he exhibited a overpowering instincts of humanity. There
Around his life, gathered the poetry of the courage, skill and presence of mind which is something else too in this record which we
ocean ; and among those who went down to then were thought % be very remarkable. ought to notice. If mere profession and arthe tea in ships, there were none upon whose His ship, driven from her anchorage, drifted rogant pretension alone make a man religcharacter the ennobling influences of that on board a heavy frigate, carrying away his ious, then Capt. Crocker had bm small claim
vocation were more genial, or more decided. quarter, and crippling the vessel. His pilot, to that character. But if a warm and genThe men of such experiences always leave we believe his mate, with a considerable erous humanity, strong only in its aspirabehind a story of dangers overcome, of mov- portion of his crew abandoned the ship, and tions, but meek and lowly in the presence of
ing incidents by flood and field, of hair- urged him to do the same. Without a pilot his God, makes a man a Christian, he. was
breadth 'scapes,—
and short handed as he was, he got under- as true a one as any chujeh in the universe
"Of being taken by the insolent foe,"
weigh, and ran for Dover harbor, in the can produce.
of distressful strokes suffered in youth— midst of a tremendous storm, where he arIt has been said that in spite of outward
things indeed which old and young "seri- rived in safety, although he had been quite appearances, no class of men is more truly
ously incline to hear ; but it is almost al- given up for lost, preserving an immense reverential than that which studies the Creaways a tale, too of noble self-sacrifice, and amount of property, estimated as we have tor and the Preserver in the wonders and
generous self-denial, and prodigal self-for- said, at £100,000, together with a valuable fortunes of the great deep. This modest
getfulness, of existence perilled to preserve ship.
journal before us is entitled "A statement
To show rheir sense of the courage and of cases of distress wherein R. R. Crocker
the existence ofothers, of unquestioned fidelity to delegated interests, and deep consci- perseverance thus displayed, the underwri- teas the instrument of a kind Providence in
entiousness in the discharge of duty. Such ters at Lloyd's Coffee House presented to saving thirty-two fellow beings from a watery
has been the life of the ripe old man which him a gratuity of £500, with an elegant sil- grave." Through it runs the spirit with
has just terminated and if it were written ver cup, upon which was an appropriate in- which it commences. Thanks for success
there are many of more pretenscd morality scription, together with the motto " Forli el are uniformly given where they are due.—
which would teach less, as theie are re- fideli nil difficile." We have seen many let- Not a favorable wind springs up, nor is an
nowned romances the wonders of which ters of congratulation addressed to him upon angry billow calmed, at the instant of a
would fall behind its undoubted verities.— this occasion, all breathing a spirit of the threatened catastrophe, but through the
But within the limits of this journal, and with warmest friendship, and admiration of his goodness of God.
the materials which we have at hand, the character.
The kind, generous, large-hearted old
task could hardly be conscientiously performCapt. Crocker afterwards for many years sailor, who " loved his fellow men"—will he
ed, and we must content ourselves with a commanded various packet ships between not find, like the Arab in the story, that his
bare fact or two, and a few reflections upon New York and London and Liverpool, at a name leads all the rest," in the record of
"
the character of the departed.
time when these floating palaces were just " those who love the Lord ?"
Capt. Crocker was born at Falmouth,
arriving at the perfection and elegance which In April, 1833, the post of Secretary of
Massachusetts, in April 1770, and if he had they have since attained. We need not say the Bedford Commercial
Insurance Compalived until next April, he would have been that in this difficult
he achieved rep- ny in this city becoming vacant, he was inservice
82 years of age. He came early in life to utation and celebrity in the mercantile world, vited to assume its duties, which invitation
New Bedford, where he was apprenticed to and the esteem and friendship of thousands he accepted. In 1834 he was elected
a
some mechanical trade, which, however, he who crossed the sea under his protection.— member of the House of Representatives of
soon abandoned for the sea. He made one His urbane and gentlemanly manners, his in- this State. He continued to fulfil the duties
short whaling voyage, and afterwards sailed teresting and varied conversation, his care of Secretary, for which he was particularly
out of Boston soon rising to the rank of com- for the comfort of those under his charge, well fitted, until 1845, when
an Assistant
mander. During the brief hostilities which and his humanity to all in suffering and want Secretary was elected. This
relieved him
arose between this country and the French were as proverbial as was his skill as a mar- from cares and responsibilities
which his inGovernment he commanded a letter of iner: In this service it is not too much to creasing years rendered
onerous. He was
and
was
of
marque,
captured by one the en- say that he was constantly receiving the afterwards upon a change in the manageemy's privateers of superior force. During most varied testimonials from the most vari- ment of the company, elected Vice Presithe engagement he received a musket ball ous sources of esteem and of gratitude, and dent, almost a nominal office, but to which,
which passed completely through his body, to this day there are numbers who remember by the consideration of the stockholders, a
happily avoiding however the vital regions. him as the pilot who weathered the storm bandsoir.e salary was attached. He continUpon this mischance, bis first officer surren- which sent terror to their hearts, and as the ued to frequent the office of the company,

Capt. Rowland R. Crocker.

"

�1852.

3

THE FRIEND, MAY,

Before you, at a distance of two miles, rises
and was there as usual upon the Saturday place I was exceedingly interested in the acwhich
the
new formed crater in the midst of fields
erruption
counts
received
of
a
1
great
general
his
death.
His
constitu-j
preceding
black,
on
base
smoking lava, while from its centre
taken
the
of
Maof
place
His
had
recently
lion remained unimpaired to the last.
in there jets a column of red hot lava to an imthe
vessel
but
Loa.
It
so
that
happened
frostly
winter,
was
as
a
juna
age
lusty
•'
"
"
instant annihilakindly." He had M disease except the or- 'which 1 sailed was forced by a 'Kona' round' mense height, threateningmortal who should
of
brother
tion
to
Kinany
presumptuous
Ito
within
six
miles
Honuapo,
ganic one of which he died. All will rethe reach of its scathing influmember him. not in the advanced stages of ney's —(ban which nothing could be more! come within
found
bro.
ence.
The
crater may be 1000 feet in diI
landing,
me,
to
—on
{opportune
and
a
bowed
senility, with impaired intellect,
to
from
100 to 150 feet high. The
on
the
rocks
near
receive
ameter
and
by
and broken frame, but erect, hale and K. standing
the
new
volcolumn
of
lava which is constantly
way
—He
had
been
to
liquid
part
almost
Ime.
juvenile
with
a
and
hearty,
firm step,
air,
and
from 200 to 500 feet
cano
and
returned
for
want
of
water
sustained
the
in
activity.
we high, and perhaps the highest jets may reach
When n man passes through a prolonged food. Talking the matter over together,
Monday, better as high as 700 feet! There is a constant and
life not only without making an enemy, but concluded to set out again on
the
tedious
ac- rapid succession of jets one within another,
journey.—We
for
constantly creating übo-t himsell warm and equipped
on Monday, March Ist, the masses falling outside and cooling as
(Ik;
was
started
cordingly
that
he
conclusion
devoted Inends,
having two natives to cairy our food and they fall, form a sort of dark veil, through
a good man M necessary and inevitable.
lot
We
baggage.—At Keaiwa, Jakoba joined us wnh which the new jets darting up with every dewas
the
of
Crocker.
Capt.
This
beloved.
his boy. He had been up the week before gree offorce %nd every variety of form, rena
man
more universally
never knew
guide der this grand fire fountain one of the most
He attached everybody with whom be came with another party and could therefore some- magnificent
objects that human imagination
in age. young us through the best course. —Being
—his
((.temporaries
in contact
can conceive of.
travelling,
what
with
Hawaiian
acquainted
childien.
He
men and women, and little
our route,
From the top of the lava jets, the current
had always a kind word and a smile ready you can judge of the tediousnessof
on the of heated air carries up a large mass of scoone
of
the
worst
when
tell
it
is
1
you
was
limited
to
not
for all. But his goodness
words or smiles. He was generous to a islands; one minds it but little, however, ria and pumice, which falls again in constant
to endure its showers for sofne miles around the crater.
fault. He never could seriously think a dol- when he has made up his mind
and
has
with
equipped While the natives were eating, they spread
patience
hardships
lar he had Ins own, for it was the properly,
food bucket, umbrellas over them to keep the falling
if you might judge by his actions, of the first himself accordingly—A good dried
meat, stones from mixing with their poe. ,
man who asked him for it. He was not rich tilled with bread, butter, cheese,
knives,
to enlarge the picture, fromlhisgrand
in this world's goods, but he might have been pickles, sardines, tea, sugar, cups,
clothes in But,
wealthy with a tithe of that prudence with and forks, &amp;x—then a change of
crater, above and to the left are scattered at
which most men guard their pockets. As it nana you get wet, which you are sure to do, various distances, several craters formed by
sleep in.
was, his overflowing generosity ollen led and a warm blanket to
former eruptions, while nearer is a small one
at the distance of still smouldering and steaming, when the erhis
sensithe
first
into
difficulties
which
pained
During
night,
him
tive nature, for he had the pride as well as 40 miles, we heard the rumbling of the volca- ruption broke out previous to the formation
no, like the roar of the heavy surf breaking of the new crater. Below the latter at a litthe heart of a gentleman.
All that is passed now. "Weary, and upon the shore —and saw the sky brilliantly tle distance are several fountains constantly
old of service," he has gone to his rest and illuminated above the crater and the flowing pouring out an immense quantity of molten
His ship is safely moored in lava. —An immense column of vapor and lava which flows in a glowing stream down
to his reward.
eternal harbors ; the vicissitudes of his voy- smoke arose from the crater and formed a the mountain slope, while farther on across
age of life are over now. Providence was magnificent arc, reflecting the red and pur- the plains which separate the two great
good to him to the last, and he died as he jple°iight of the fiery masses below. Anima- mountains, through the deep forests and
wished to die, suddenly, and without pro- ted by sights and sounds so grand, we quick- more than half way down to Hilo, is spread
longed pain. His venerable form will no ened our pace in order to gain a nearer view one devastating sea of smouldering ruins.
more appear in its accustomed and familiar Lithe scene, believing that in this case, dis- And übove all this scene of desolation, far
place ; his cordial voice will no more offer tance did not lend enchantment to the view. above the whirling clouds and sulphurous
the civilities of the hour ; he has told his On the second day towards night we came smoke, rejoicing in the glorious sun-light,
last story ; he has clone his last kind act.
to a hut built by the party of the previous rise in sublime majesty, the snow crowned
Yet he leaves behind him a memory green week being wet with the rain, we conclud- peaks of Manna Kea, the only smiling thing
and fresh as were his declining years—a ed to spend "the night here—we enlarged the amid all the wide spread scenes of desert
memory that will be cherished in as many the house, built a fire in one part of it, put waste!
hearts as knew his own, and in every clime on dry clothes, wrapped ourselves in our We were not quite satisfied with a distant
blankets and passed a comfortable night. view of objects so interesting and new, and
that he ever visited.
[N. B. Shipping List. Jan. 20, 1852. The morning was fine, we soon caught sight seeing a small hill of old lava about fifty
of the lava jets as they shot up above the dis- yards below the crater, we made our way to
tant mountain ridges, and passing the whit- the top of it. But we had scarcely begun to
Great Volcanic Erruption. ened bones of a mule lost by the King's par- enjoy the advantages of our position, when a
ty while crossing the mountains two or three vidlent whirlwind sent us stumbling over the
During the last few weeks, there have years ago—snatching here and there a bunch rocks, and nearly smothered us in a cloud
been the most remarkable volcanic errup- of delicious ohelos which grew by the path, of ashes, smoke and pumice stones. We imM. of the third day mediately retreated, and with as much rapidtions on the island of Hawaii. Several par- we came, at about 10 A.
to the last ridge that separated us from the ity, of course, as a becoming sense of our
ties have visited the island for the purpose of region of the erruption; ascended to the top
own dignity, or rather in plain terms, as a
witnessing the terrific scene. Numerous of this, the whole scene, wild, terrific, grand, comfortable regard for the tenderness of our
eye-witnesses agree in confirming the state- magnificent, bursts upon our senses !
poor shins and toes, already somewhat batment, that this is the most remarkable which
It is impossible to give you a complete tered, would allow. We spent half the night
has occurred since the discovery of the in- description of what we saw and heard or to in watching the various phenomena attending
picture which will produce the same the erruption. And when the morning broke
lands. Lava-jets have been thrown up from draw a
on your mind that the original did clear and bright on the awe-inspiring scene,
impression
five to seven hundred feet ; but our readers upon mine. Language, on such an occasion the clouds of vapor rose from the wooded
will no doubt prefer thetestimony of an eye- h powerless, eloquence is dumb and silence plains and melted away through the transpaWe counted the ships
witness, to any remarks we might offer upon is the expression most congenial to the senti- rent atmosphere.
Yet
I
you
ments
of
the
soul.
to
which
floated
the
will
try
give
upon
quiet bosom of Hilo
We
take
the liberty of publishthe subject.
facts and hints which will assist your bay, and caught the joyous sunbeams reflectsome
desing the following familiar and life-like
imagination in its conceptions of the wildly ed from the snows of Mauna Kea so strongly
cription of the scene
contrasted with the glowing rays from t»e
interesting scenes we witnessed.
Waiohinu, March 12, 1852.
Imagine yourself, then, just ascended to fire-fountain. We listened to the timid chirp
Brother Damon:—On my arrival at this the top of the above mentioned eminence. of the solitary wild bird, almost lost amid the

I

—

-

—

:—

—

�THE FRIEND, MAY,

4

1852.

General Meeting.
volcanic thunder which constantly shook the structions given to their commanders, four
lava hills and streams around us. We knelt vessels returned entirely unsuccessful. Cap.
The missionaries of the American Board,
upon the rocks and. joined our feeble voices Farr, commander of the fifth, instead of rea general meeting this year, commenchold
great
wise,
the
the
good,
in adoration of the
to England, went to Cape Town.
and glorious author of all. Thus we reluc- turning
on the second week of the current month.
ing
tantly turned from the attractive scene and re- There, at a coffee house, he chanced to meet Some have already arrived, and others are
traced our steps home-ward, feeling concious an American commanding a whale ship, daily expected. This will be an important
of having witnessed one of the most stupen- who gave him tho requisite information about
as the enlerprize will be
dous exhibitions within the reach of mortals, the location of the African Guano Islands.— meeting especially
most
interof
i undertaken
sending an exploring expediand of having received one of the
esting and impressive lessons within the wide This hint opened the door to the immense tion to visit the Caroline group of Islands
trade in African Guano. These facts we with reference to the establishment of a new
range of cosmical science.
Your* with brotherly affection,
derive from Chamber's Edinburgh Journal,
mission. The Rev. Messrs. Snow, and GuJ. FULLER. for June
1844.
14,
with their families have already arrived
lick,
Kilnuea
P. S. We spent Thursday night at
When England, America, and other comand reached the valley of " Shining water,'
from the United States, on their way to this
mercial nations will vie with each other in
(Waiohinu,) on Saturday.
prospective mission. An associate is expectfurnishing hints to Commercial Wealth the ef- ed
daily to arrive on board the "Snow
fects will be far more powerful to cement
These gentlemen will probably
Squall."
friendship and peace among the nations of sail during the month of June. Their ultithe earth, than all military and naval opera- mate location is not now known.
tions.
Most heartily do we rejoice in this onward
Hints to Commercial Wealth.
Too long have large and popumovement.
Hawaiian Parliament.
American Statesman, Merchants, Shiplous
groups of Polynesia, remained unexowners, and Seamen are now deeply interof
the
Hawaiian
The
Legislative
Body
plored
by the heralds of the gospel. The
ested in the success of the whale-fishery in
was
on devotees of science, the merchants, and the
year,
nation
for
the
current
opened
the Arctic ocean. Many millions of dollars
the 13th ultimo, by a Royal speech. The navigators of this and a past age, have quite
are now invested in this enterprise. Capt.
exercises
took place at the stone native outstripped the followers of Christ, in their
Roys has justly the honor of making the first
There was more than the ordinary zeal to explore "the dark places" of the
church.
cruise for whales within Bhering's straits.—
display and a large attendance of earth. Too long has the mantle of the marIt may not be generally known why he was military
induced to steer his good ship, " Superior" Foreigners and Hawaiians. We have tiever tyred Williams, remained unworn by some
for those high latitudes. The cause was this, attended on a similar occasion, when the ex- youthful apostle of Polynesia. Most cordially
in reading Beechy's Voyages, his eye rested ercises were conducted with more dignity and do we second this new missionary enterprize,
and we hope that Hawaiian churches will
Off here, we saw a propriety.
upon this remark,
The
the
next
meeting
to
adjourned
day
fully come up to their duty of sustaining this
great many black whales, more than I ever
when
the
of
His
mission, by their contributions.
Ministers
Majesty's
reports
remember to have seen, even in Baffin's
were
We
that
our
narrow
presented.
regret
Bay." 'Our attention was called to this hint,
Church going in Honolulu.
by Capt. Roys, immediately after his return. limits do not allow a publication of those
The remark will be found in the first volume highly interesting and important documents. For several years the increasing populaBoth Houses are now engaged in daily tion in Honolulu, has excited a growing conof Beechy, page 379, (Eng. Edition) and reviction in the minds of many that other
fers to Icy Cape, situated .70*20' N. Lat. sessions.
The
House
of
Nobles
is
of
comprised
places for religious worship, besides the
162°
W. Long.
and
We have alluded to this fact, in part to High Chiefs, Governors of the different Isl- Chapel, should be opened. A few months
show the importance of sending out vessels ands, and His Majesty's Ministers, in all, since, the services of the Episcopal Church
on voyages of discovery, and also to remind sixteen Hawaiians and three Foreigners. were commenced and are still continued at
The House of Representatives is com- Manna Kilika. More recently services have
Americans of their indebtedness to Englishof 21 members, including 17 Hawaii- been commenced at the Rev. L. Smith's
posed
men.
and
ans
7 Foreigners.
We shall now refer to a corresponding inchurch, where the Rev. T. E. Taylor, late
from the reports pnblished in the of the Lahaina Chaplaincy, regularly officiJudging
cident in the history of British Commerce,
wherein Englishmen must acknowledge their Government Organ, subjects of vital impor- ates every Sabbath morning at 11 o'clock.—
indebtedness to Americans, who suggested tance to the welfare of the Hawaiian nation The Chapel not being crowded as heretofore
and race are now under discussion.— will afford accommodations for seamen, resian important hint to Commercial Wealth.
at 11 A. M.,
Sometime previous to the year 1843, an The new constitution, taxes, finances and dents and strangers.
American trader, (name unknown,) obser- other subjects of a kindred nature merit and 7| P. M.
ving the interest which the importation of careful deliberation.
This number of the Friend will be
Peruvian Guano was creating in England, It does not come within the design of our
discuss
sent
to
all of our old subscribers in Honolulu
to
these
or
all
medtopics,
at
was reminded that he had seen large deposits! paper
and
other
parts of the Islands. Persons dedle
with
the
vexed
of
the
political
questions
of a similarsubstance on the coast of Africa.
He published a short narration of his obser- country, still we cannot profess indifference sitous of taking more than a single copy,
vations in an American newspaper. This, to the weal or woe of this kingdom. Long will please examine the terms, and give noand
paper chanced to meet the eye of an English may it stand. May its independence be se- tice, as early as possible. Missionaries
islands,
are
of
the
shipmaster, who forwarded it to his corres- cured and employed for the welfare of all others at remote parts
It
agents.
as
respectfully requested to act
pondents in Liverpool, who were thereby in- who dwell upon Hawaiian shores.
that, as formerly, some will
is
to
he
hoped
duced, at the close of the year 1842, to send New Bedford Oil Market—Feb. 9.— subscribe for more than a single copy, for
out five ships to be loaded with African gu- Sperm $1 23 to $1 25. Whale bone, 43c. the purpose of lending their aid in support
ano. From the indefinite nature of the in- Whale oil no report.
of the paper.

—

F
THE RIEND.

"

.

�1852.

5

THE FRIEND, MAY,

be deductand was compelled to come "inside" for months. From this number must
Location of the Volcano.
one for an
ed
one
for
a
duplicate
signature,
re-'
has undergone extensive
We insert the above map, for the purpose repairs. She
expiration of time, the condition being limited
hove down by
been
having
pairs,
the
locareaders
abroad
to one month, and one, Mr. Lemaire whohas
of indicating to our
and Thorpe, alongside of their hulk|been removed from among us by death. Our
tion of the recent volcanic eruptions. All Tanner
Q,uixotte." Capt. Morice has imembers will thus be at the present time 99.
"Don
the islands are volcanic in their formation. the
the rethe spot superin- During the same time 500 copies of
No eruptions have taken place on any of the been constantly upon
to the Hawaiian Parliaview
of
an
address
all
islands, except Hawaii, since their discovery. tending the work, and we congratulate
ment has been published and circulated at an
and
issue.
on
the
successful
northcreditable
parties
expense of 31 dollars, which'sum has been
The recent eruption occurred on the
Guvessel
was
with
Peruvian
This
freighted
paid by contributions made by members of
near
the
cenerly slope of Mauna Loa, (or
Society and the sale of copies of the
tre of the island,) and the stream ran towards ano, and her disaster was the more to be re- the
p
amphlet.
as
known
Byron's
Bay,
Waiakea, or Hilo, or
gretted from the fact that the voyage was It is believed by your committee that this
among navigators. The stream ceased to rather of an "experimental nature."
publication has exerted a salutary influence
flow about seven miles from Hilo.
We feel it our duty to caution our sea- on society, and led many to a consideration
Anniversary Week.
faring friends to be very particular in hoist- of the evils of intemperance who would not
Jrtve considered the subject but for
ing the usual signal for a pilot, otherwise perhaps
the
The semi-monthly meetings
or
its
publication.
fourth
week
May,
in
During the
they can have no good reason to expect as- have been attended by a less number of the
of
the
Meeting
week
the
General
of
closing
sistance from the shore. If the pilot's flag■regular members than would be desirable,
American Mission in Honolulu, public and is not hoisted, it is taken for granted that the'.and your committee would recommend that
anniversary meetings of the following Benev- ship-master is well acquainted with the an- the ladies be especially invited to attend our
meetings. Mr. Beckwith gave the society a
olent Societies will be held at the Seamen's chorage.
lecture to a full and attentive audience.
Chapel :
The movements ofthe society are onwards,
Monday evening, May 2ith, Meeting in
Report
and evidences ofits beneficial influence are
behalf of the Seaman's cause.
Com. of H. T. Society for the quar-\ almost daily coming to the knowledge of
ofthe Ex.
ter ending last of March 1852.
your committee.
Tuesday evening May 25th, Anniversary
W. NEWCOMB, Chairman.
of the Hawaiian Missionary Society.
It is a matter of some little importance to
association
to
voluntary
26th,
Anniverthe
members
ofany
Wednesday evening, May
Our Exchanges.—During the suspension
have an occasional summary of their prosary of the Hawaiian Bible Society.
ceedings, brought within a narrow compass, of the Friend, the following papers have
Thursday evening, May 27th, Anniversary that their efforts and movements may be un- been regularly forwarded in Exchange, (and
of the Hawaiian Tract Society.
derstood, and duly appreciated by every we would acknowledge our special obligaFriday evening, May 28th, Anniversary of member of such association.
tions to the publishers) :—New-York "Tri
It is made the duty of the executive com- 1
the Temperance Society.
Temperance Society bune," "Herald," and "Observer," the
Reports of these various societies, will be mittee of the Hawaiian
to render quarterly an exhibit of the condi- "Washington National Era," "American
presented and addresses delivered.
tion of the Society, and in accordance with Messenger," " Whalemen's Shipping List,"
would offer
We are happy to see the British ves- this requirement, your committee
"Nantdcket Enquirer," "The Puritan Rereport.
following
the
adcorder." We are happy to add to our list of
sel " Haipooneer," Capt. Morice, is
The number of members of the Society at
Christian
vertised to sail for Hong Kong, her destined the present time as per reference to the sig- exchanges the " Washington tha
"Cal.
"Pacific,"
the
and
Statesman,"
of
her
arrival
off
the
harof
is
an
in102, showing
natures
the pledge
port. On the day
Advocate."
21 members during the past 3 Ch.
bor, she unfortunately touched upon the reef, crease of

,

:

�THE FRIEND, MAY,

6

1852.

,
tion for you will remember that it was the be found so fair as the daughters of
poor despised fisherman of Galilee who first and when his Maker shall call, may he be
dared engage in a good work, and you have old and "full nfdiiys."
After a visit to the Sandwich Islands.
alluded to a book-worm,
The following communication has been but to refer to the pages of the Friend to We have slightly
show that the same liberal spirit which has and imagine we hear him reasoning as
placed at our disposal by the Editor of the ever kept the wheel in motion is still extant book-worms doublti ss reason at times, "Great
Polynesian. The author remarks that the amongst the despised class in substantial men are not always wise, neither do the aged
idea of writing was suggested by reading a donations. We should not be surprised il understand jugilments. Therefoie barken
series of articles, entitled "wants of Sea- there was a falling off in the latter particu- to me ; I also will.show my opinion."
Yet from the knowledge we have of a
"Wants of Seamen No. 1."
men," published in our columns during the lar.
class of men amongst whom we have found "Though applicable to sea-fa ing men in
year 1847. Those articles have occasioned many who can safely be denominated nature's general, my remarks have particular refermuch discussion among our sea-faring read- noblemen we are rather inclined to the opini- ence to whalemen." Listen ye veterans of
ers. Some have complained of their unfair- on, that reared as they are amid storms and the Harpoon Lance. Elihu has the floor ;
ness. Our reply has been, to those who tempests, the puff of a book-worm cannot Job and Ins giey headed fri nds are silent.
move them.
They are amazed, they are confounded. As
have complained,—"take up the pen and reThe most powerful agent ha3been the this Orthodox Youth seizes a cutting spade in
ply, our columns are open to good tempered missionary—the very name has a magical one hand, and a boat-hook in the other and
communications." Several have followed the influence, inasmuch as it imparts to the mind launches out into deep water, not to attack
suggestion as our columns will repeatedly an idea of devotedness to the good of others. Leviathan'but Leviathan's worst enemy the
show. We would now suggest a cessa- They have left their homes and all the pleas- Whaleman.
ing associations of youth and come to this Inconsideiate one dost think to "draw him
tion of hostilities. Should our whaling cor- distant clime to teach the rude children of
out with a hook."
respondents continue the chase, and renew nature how to appreciate its rich gifts, and Behold him ye wise ones, ye venerable, he
the attack in time to come, the writer of venerate and adore the rich giver.
commences the attack without boat, or boat's
those articles may turn upon his pursuers, The writer has witnessed the purely disin- crew—it is true, he has oneraw hand, he has
and although "Fabius" denominates him, a terested conduct of many of these devoted given him his first order, "Shake out theForemen and seen and now acknowledges the topsail."
book-worm, yet he might show that he was good effects of their teachings. Let us susThe Youth does not understand him and
not altogether crushed and subdued. He tain them so long as they keep on the right uhv should he ! it is an order unintelligible
may never have wielded a lance or thrown a course and ever pray that their declining to the more experienced. The writer has
harpoon, yet» it must be confessed, that he years may be blessed with a conciousness of been seventeen years on ocean's waters, and
having benefited their fellow men and tltat declares it to be a "darkening of counsel by
holds the pen of a ready writer.
genial breezes may waft them to Heaven, words without knowledge." Brother Hunt
Mr. Editor.—The following was intend- their final resting place.
you had better take in that Fore Top-Sail, if
ed for the "Friend," it being suggested upon These two named classes, however dissim- it has shaken long enough and if it was realreading in that paper several articles entitled ilar they may appear to the reader, are so ly necessary for you to take a voyage to Cal"Wants of Seamen." It was written by an intimately associated with the early history ifornia yon should have embarked with some
old whaling Captain while at sea, some time of these islands, and we may say connected skilful whaleman, where you could at your
in the year 1850.* That paper having ceased together, that it is extremely difficult to sepleisure have familiarised yoursell with the
upon the departure ofits Editor to America, arate them or detract from the one without de- technicalities as w«ll as gained an insight inI beg it may be inserted in your paper, to tracting from the other. They were among to! lie character of a set of men you evidentshow that there are men in that profession the first who came to the distant shore, the ly do not understand and in your'next series
who devote some of their time to reading, merchant and mechanic soon followed, rep- of letters let more of the spirit of him you call
and who understand what is aimed at them resentatives of the various governments were Master appear.
as a class, and who are ready to defend their duly appointed that the interests of each naMr. Editor, adieu, we have met and we
rights.
tive might be respected. Hospitals were have parted again and again, and now home
Mr. Editor, —During my last visit to the erected, that the sick might be cared forand and its loved ones art: inviting us, and our noSandwich Islands, those beautiful spots of corresponding appointments made which have ble hark feeling the impulse of a gentle gale,
earth, remote from the immediate influences afforded a rich income to the heretofore like a thing of life, is urging her way onward
of the civilized world, we observed a happy needy aspirants.
and soon we hope to be safely moored.
change; notwithstanding the many hindranFABIUS.
All these owe their success to the peaceful
Yours &amp;c,
ces and disadvantages, they continue to influences of the missionary who " calmed the At sea Int. 10= North, long. 153° 30
thrive, progress and "blossom as the rose." savage breast" and made it safe for people West.
The people are indern !aut and happy.
to risk, lives and property by settling upon
When we contrast the present with the the Islands, and to the whaleman whose
Capt. Matthew Luce.
past, we are led to exclaim what a change wants have contributed to the wants of others.
morally and politically, and this change has But says one why do not the Missionaries The recent death of this enterprising mergone on with an imperceptible movement to adhere strictly to their work, why meddle chant caused a MMatkM) in this community
the resident, yet after years of absence, the with governmental affairs ! This is a ques- of regret and sorrow almost as great as that
careful observer can discover much to ad- tion they must settle with their own consci- which followed Capt. Crocker to the grave.
mire. The uniform good conduct of the na- ence. The writer can only admire the wis- Few men lived more loved and respected.
tives, the stately edifices that have been rear- dom of His Gracious Majesty's choice, who He was emphatically an honest man. In a
ed under the fostering and encouraging care doubtless says to himself, who so fit to advise community somewhat prone to personal critof good government, the inducement offered with us as those who have ever sought to do icism we never heard any one speak aught
for foreigners to settle', and pursue their law- us good !
against h'in. In every dealing he was
ful business with all the privileges of subOne of the first upon the list of foreign res- thoroughly scrupulous and upright. In prijects and the almost invariable success of such idents is a merchant whom to know is to vate life his benevolence was unbounded as
as attend closely to business, —all these com- respect and admire, he is one too, who has it was unostentatious. There was a blunt
bine to make a favorable impression upon the been afflicted. For long weary weeks he lay frankness and a masculine strength in Ins
mind of the stranger, and he naturally en- upon his bed of suffering and anguish, his character which spoke in every tone of his
quires, what has conduced to this happy life hanging, as it were upon a straw ; but voice, and every movement of his person.—
state of things ?
What class of men have God smiled upon him and he recovered He left behind him an ample fortune, the
done most towards effecting it ? To be lib- and now blessed with the society of B his be- fruit of prudence, skill and industry,—but
eral we will say there are many causes, and loved family he can look upon the past as a he left something better than that—a good
different classes have contributed their mile troubled dream, enjoying with them the fruits name among the rich and the poor—in the
but the whalemen and missionary stand first of his honest industry, and hereafter may it dwelling of opulence, the workshop, the
upon the list, Nay, start not at the declare- be said that in all the land no women are to counting-room, and the cottage.[N.B.Paper.
A Whaleman's Reflections!

•

�7

THE FRIEND, .MAY, 1852,

the liberty of mankind ; and if it be their
united destiny, in the course of human events,
that they shall be called upon, in the cause
Mr. Seward, from the Committee on
Commerce, reported a bill to the United By the latest arrival from San Francisco, of humanity, and in the cause of freedom to
States Senate, for the employment of one or we have received a copy of N. Y. Tribune, stand against a world at arms, they are of a
race, and of a blood, to meet that crisis withtwo small vessels, with competent officers, to
explore those seas in the line of our com- containing an address of the Hon. Daniel out shrinking from danger, and without quailWebster, at the 48th anniversary of the N. ing in the presence of earthly power.
merce and navigation, to and from China
It is said that the bill will pass, in which Y. Historical Society. His subject was the Gentlemen, I must bring these desultory
case ("apt. Ringgold of the Navy, will prob- Dignity aad Importance rf History. The ad- remarks to a close, 1 terminate them, where
ably be appointed to the command of the ex- dress occupy six closely printed columns of perhaps I ought to have begun—namely, with
a few words on the present state and condipedition. The following is Mr. Seward's (be Tribune. His remarks were
highly ap- tion of our country and the prospects which
report, which will be found to contain interpropriate, and his illustrations drawn from are before her.
esting facts —[N. Y. Tribune.
Unborn ages and visions of glory crowd
The Committee on Commerce, to whom was Grecian, Roman, English and American hisreferred several memorials of merchants, tory were admirably suited to set forth in a upon my soul ; the realization of all these,
however, is in the hands and good pleasure
underwriters, an(J others, praying for an strong
light the theme of the address. of Almighty God. But under His divine
exploration and rcconnoisance of such
parts of the China Seas, Straits of (jas- We cannot forbear quoting the eloquent blessing, it will be dependent on the characper, and Java Sea, as lie directly in the closing paragraphs of the address. He had ter and the virtue of ourselves, and of our
route of vessels proceeding to and from been speaking of the Continental Congress, posterity.
If classical history has been found to be,
Ch'iia, submit the following report :
and then proceeds to the Convention for fra- is now, and shall continue
to be, the conThat in the summer of 1818, Capt. Roys,
comitant of free institutions, and of popular
of the whale ship Superior, penetrated the ming the Constitution:
Arctic Ocean through Behring Strait, and I may not dwell longer on this animating eloquence, what a field is opening to us for
encountered all the dangers of a Polar Sea and enchanting picture. Another grand pic- another Herodotus, another Thucydides, (onunexplored, hut that bis enterprise was richly ture succeeds it, and that is, the'Convention ly may his theme not be a Peloponesian war,)
rewarded, and that, since that time, a large which framed the Constitution, the spirited and another Livy ! ana) let me say, gentleand profitable fishery has been created, in debates in the States, by the ablest men of men, that if we. and our posterity, shall.be
the regions thus explored. That in this those States, upon Its adoption, and, finally, true to the Christian religion, if we and they
trade, during the last two years, there have the organization of the first Congress, filled shall live always in the fear of God, and shall
been employed two hundred and ninety-nine by the gray haired men of the Revolution, respect his commandments ; if we and they
ships, eight thousand nine hundred and sev- and younger and vigorous patriots, and lov- shall maintain just, moral sentiments, and
enty seamen ; and that the value of the ers of liberty, and Washington himself in the such conscientious convictions of duty as
ships and cargoes was seventeen and a half principal Chair of State surrounded by his shall control the heart and life, we may have
millions of dollars, and of the oil and whale- Heads of Department, selected from those the highest hopes of the future fortunes of
bone obtained about nine millions ; but that who enjoyed the greatest portion of his own of our country ; and if we maintain those inthe disasters attending the trade had been regard, and stood highest in the esteem of stitutions of government, and that political
union, exceeding all praise, as much as it exunusually calamitous. Seven vessels were their country.
wrecked within the last year, and there are Neither Xenophon nor Thucydides, neith- ceeds all former examples of political associaer Sallust nor Livjt presents any picture of tions, we may be sure of one thing, that while
painful reports of others.
There is no chart of these seas, and it is an assembly of public men, or any scene of our country furnishes materials for a thousand
so manifestly the interest and duty of the History, which, in its proper grandeur, or its masters of the historic art, it will afford no
United States to protect and foster so great large and lasting influence upon the happi- topic for a Gibbon. It will have no decline
and fall. It will go on prospering and to
a commercial enterprise, that the Committee ness of mankind, equals this.
do not think it necessary to enlarge upon this Its importance, indeed, did not, at the mo- prosper. But if we and our posterity rement, strike the minds of ordinary men.— ject religious instruction and authority, viosubject.
The trade with China and other Oriental But Burke saw it with an intuition clear as late the rules of eternal justice, trifle with
States has received a new impulse from the the light of heaven. Charles Fox saw it, the injunctions of morality, and recklessly
colonization of California by the United and sagacious and deep-thinking minds over destroy the political constitution which holds
us together, no man can tell how suddenly a
States, under circumstances singularly pro- all Europe beheld it.
would
how
destiEngland,
England,
thy
catastrophe
may overwhelm us, that shall
and
steam
is
navigation already openpitious,
ing with certain prospects a great and endu- nies have been altered, if the advice of bury all our glory in profound obscurity. If
Chatham, Burke and Fox had been fol- that catastrophe shall happen, let it have no
ring enlargement.
history ! Let the horrible narrative never
But it is known to all persons engaged in lowed ?
that commerce,Hhat the seas traversed are Shall I say altered for the better ? Cer- be written, let its fate be like that of the lost
full of perils of which there is no sufficient tainly not, not for the better of England her- books of Livy, which no human eye shall evwarning in existing charts or in the experi- self; probably she is stronger and richer at er read, or the missing Pleiad, of which no
ence of navigators. Every consideration of this moment, than if she had listened to the man can ever know more than that it is lost,
commercial interest, or naval competition, unheeded words of her great statesmen.— and lost forever.
and of humanity, enjoins upon the govern- Neither nations nor individuals always foreTemperance Society.
ment an exploration and reconnbisance of see that, which their own interest and hapthese seas also. A large island has been re- piness require.
cently discovered (called Ousinia) in the Our greatest blessings often arise from the List of officers of the Hawaiian Temperway to Japan snd Northern China. It is disappointment of our most anxious hopes, ance Society and chosen for the quarter besupposed to be very fertile and densely in- and our most fervent wishes
ginning April Ist, 1852.
Let us know,
habited, but no vessel has gone around the
"serves
President
Wm. H. Johnson.
indiscretion
sometimes
as
well.
Oar
and
none
.island
touched its shores. It
our deepplots do fail: and that should teach us,
Pres.
S. Cooke,
A.
Vice
(wpuld be of incalculable benefit to the Amer- When
There's a divinity that shape* our ends.
ican trade if the island should be found to Rough hew them how we will."
Samuel Lea.
Secretary
ontain a good harbor and a hospitable people.
Instead of subject colonies, England now
Executive Committee.
The last mail from U.S. brings intelli- beholds a mighty rival, rich, powerful, intel- E. G. Beckwith, Rev. S. C. Damon, and
gence that an expedition including several ligent like herself. And may these coun- Rev. T. E. Taylor.
war steamers, a Frigate, and a Corvette, un- tries be forever friendly rivals. May their
Vigilance Committee.
der command of Com. Perry was about to
greatness, sustaining themselves,
Israel H. Wright, FrankNorthrop,
Wm.
We
learn
this
to
the
of
the
sail to Japan.
promotion
from the San be always directed
Francisco Herald
Davis.
peace, the prosperity, the enlightenment and
ExpoltrahiSeas.
nfeCina

Historical.

ENGLAND AND AMERICA.

—

:

:

lin

.

�THE FRIEND, MAY, 1852.

8
The want of space prevents us from
noticing the examination at Punahou, and
Dr. Newcomb's excellent lecture, before the
H. T. Society, but a copy having been requested for publication we bespeak for it a
wide circulation, and attentive perusal by
alt those who would avoid the drunkard's

grave.
For the reason just stated we must omit
noticing " No. 2," of the 'Transactions of
the Royal Hawaiian Agricultural Society,"
which has just been issued,
Icy* Friends of Hawaiian Agriculture,
remember that the Annual Meeting will convene the first Tuesday in June.

Mr. Mitchell, Gregory's Express

Agent in Honolulu, has our thanks for a late
copy of the Boston Courier. For the information of our sea-faring readers, we would
state that Gregory's Express is connected
with Kingly's Express at New Bedford.

30—Am wh ah Coriolanua,Grinnell, cruiae.
—Am wh ah John and Edward, Cathcart, cruiae.
—Am wh ah George, Clark, cruise.
31—Am bg Zoe, Pearaon, Sen Francisco.
April I—Fr wh ah Salamander, Hardy, truicf.
9—Am wh ah Magnolia, Cox, cruise.
Br. bk Ore-, Teschen
*
.*&gt;.—Am bk Ruaael, Cnrley, entire.
6.—
ah Geo. Washington, Edwartls, cruiae.
Sarah, Swift, cruiae.
Superior, Bahcock, cniiae.
7.—
H,- Haw achr Geo Washington, Cary, S. Francisco.
Am sh Alice Frazer, Taber, cniiae.
Alice Mendell, Wing, cruiae.
Good Return, Wing
Hano. brig't. Lina, Oenker, Co). River.
Am. wh ah Wm W irt, Fisher, cruise.
April 9—Am wh ship Northern Light, Statt, cruise.
10—Am sh KutiiMifi', Pierce, cruise
10—Am wh sh Helen Augusta, Fates, cruise.
13—Am wh ah Canada, West, cruise.
14—Am herm britr Glencoe, Sampson, South Pacific.
14—Am ahip Esther May, Howe*, Manila.
14—Am wh bk Rajah, Fiaher, cruise.
14—Russian hk Huonii, Hashagen, cruise.
15—Am bk Wm. I*. Wheaton, Gre**n, cniise.
Apr. 17. Am wh* ah Corinthian, Stuart, cruise.
30. Am wh sh Levi Starhurk, Ellison, cruise.
Sl.—Am wh sh Citizen, Bailey, cniise.
iB.-Ain bk Eliza Thornton, Post, for N. York.
99.—F»r wn sn piu [X, Lecnminer, to cuise.
April 94— AmSrh Golden Rule, Gragg, Tahiti.
96—Am brig Noble, Robertson, San Francisco.
99—Am her. brig Emetine, Green, Petropaulovskol.

—Am wh bk Cavalier, Freeman, Stuningtun, 7 mo*,
75 bbls sperm.
13—Am wh sh Helen Augusta,Falea, Newport, 15m0*,60
*p, 95blk fish.
—Am wh sh rlraiunt, Child*, 6 mos, clean.
16—Am wh sh Geo. Washington, Edwards, 4 months,
clean.
—Am wh sh Ohio, Norton. 5 mos, 150bbls sperm.
IH-Am wh sh Snperh r, Hahrork, 5 nn.s, 45 bbls sp.
19—Am wh ah Marcus, Sherman, Mate, M Mil sl&gt;91—Am wh sh Hihernia, Jeffrey 3 1-9 Boa, 7!l Ibis sp.
—Am wh sh (oriolanus, Grin net, 7 l-tmos tUH hhls sp.
99— U. S. S. St. Mary's, A. Magruder,9l ds lm San Fran
ciscn.
23—Am wh sh James Maury, Welden, 5 ni&lt; s, &lt; le.ui.
M /km wh sh Mary Anne, Dollman, 78 d*, M hUi
sperm.
—Am »eh Gazelle, Stoddard, 18 ds fm San Francisco.
98—Am wh ship Meteor, Jeffrey, 4 1-9 nios, clean.
Uii wh sh L. C. Kirhmond, Cochran, it aaoa, MO sp.
—Am wh ship Benjamin Tucker, Lands,4 12 months,

"

—

clean.
sh Electra,

—Am wh

Clark, 91 mos nut, 80 bbls sp.,

IM wh, this aeaaon.

Marine Intelligence—Disaster.
Am whale shin* NiihtitrTok, Calni, arrived, hnvinc,
two weeks Since. 11l il White m|liml|, -iO 3 N., lf)&lt;i w W, t loal all
three lopmnsts, inn! head of mizeii iiihmi. ii was. ah done in ■
itiii'iU' or le-s ! She lei) Hongkong, Feb. 24Hi, where 2 wh.
slii| s were recruiting, but the Siiihll pox wnv raging on shore.
May 1.

.

&gt;

PORT OF LAHAINA.

The distrtsi' broke oui alter kink
Him mil"! g the shipping.
ships lihil gone to at*, mid iliej were i.bliued la pall bnek. One
h ri not Imek itie ft im il time. During the winter cruise, the
vessel took 2io sp and lihlV, 1000 »p. ami 200 wluilt

Arrived.

Memoranda.

Feb. 96—Haw sch Curlew, Bailey, 18 daya from San Francisco.
Bedford, O S. Tooker Maarer. 55
—Am. ah Charles Phelps, Birch, 17 moa, 340 sp, 80 wh. Per Bark Martha, of .New
days from I lobar!towO. via lluahiue, 20 davit.
March I—Am. wh ah Cabinet, Noyea, 6 moa, clean.
DIED.
s—Am wh ib Cortes, Cromwell, 8 mos, 50 ap, 30 wh. Sinleil (VotH Molmrttowri l»ec IS, 1001. .hip South. Boston,
Williams, of New Bedford, 115 hbls Mperm. Jhii. 6. ship Lark,
Hilo.
On the 3d Inst., of apoplexy in this city, Ai.mn W. Paai.n sperm, -mi wlialc 1? MKMitJta out Left
—Fr wh ah Orion, Hache, 4 months, clean, Nantes. Kell), New I.T-ml
•om, Esq., t native of New Ark, aged 411 year*.
ship Euieritld. .Imjj:'T, of Sag
—Am wh sh Cowper, Fisher, 0 moa, clean, N. bed- at M&lt; hartlown, .Inn. Ifi. Ih'2,
ilia remaina were preceded U) the Nuuanu Ceinetry, by the
5
inns mil, clean; ship Cicero. Pol New Bedford, zl
ford.
O.
0.
order
F.,
I.
to which
he belonged, and followed by a
; whip Lhllm Rooke, Gar
lon
Eiitclnnd
bbls
to
moat,
nliippeil
6—Am wh ship Almira, Jenfts*, 9 mos, 180ap, Hilo.
arge concourse of citizen*.
—Am wh ah Nassau, White, 19 mos, 50 ap, 500 wh, finer. New Bedford. 44 months, {too sperm; thtp Candace,
Lost overboard from the schooner Msria, on her passage
100
sp. 6o wli ; ship .South
\\
1
mos
otil.
nlker,
6
ondon,
N.
Marquesas.
from Honolulu to Lahaina, on Uie night of the 10th ol April,
—Am wh bk Siiepardess, Watroua, 6 moa, 150 sp, Carolina, Alexander, New Bedfotd. 8 mos out, 130 wh, to he.
Colin J. Au.sk, Esq., of Lahaina, Attorney at Law, aged 31)
N. Lominn, tiros
America,
ship
coiideiiiiied
Knrth
}
MaaoS,
Mystic.
years, formerly of Krederickton, New Brunswick. [New
out, tin ap ship Mechanic, t or), Newjiort, 5 1-2 mos out, 30
—Am sch Laura Bevan,Pierce, from Honolulu.
Brunswick papers please cojiy.]
Merwin,
;
ship
taking passenger*,
llenr\
sp
mhefk,
York,
N
Am wh ah Bartholomew tiosnuld, Eustice 7 rnoa, 5
I
to Melbourne ; ship Architect, Gasper, N. York, loading lor
ap, New Bedford.
At the U. S. Hospital, Honolulu, March 25th, Franklin
«&gt;
Hun
I'r.iiu
i-i
V—Am wh sh Artie, Gellet, 14moa,80gp, Marquesas.
White, Providence, R. I., about 94.
M-irt-h -'.—Left lluahiue. Am. sch. Emma Packer, Taylor,
—Am wh ah (Radiator, Turner, 18 moa, 40 sp, Society
At Koloa, Kauai, April 18th,after a short illness, Mary Eloiwaiting cargo for Shu Fnuickco.
Ialand a.
as, daughter of Dr. Jia. W. and Melicent K. Smith, aged one
Murck -J. —Amer. sch Velnsco. Worth, do do.
—Am wh ah Seine,Land re, 17 moa, clean Kawaihae.
year and 96 days. Of such is the kingdom of Heaven."
—Am art .luh«i&gt; PrinijJe. (Mark. do. do.
9—Am wh ship Betsey Williams, Pedleton, 8 mos, 110
Ship Esther May spokeofTCape Horn Jan27th, bark Oscar,
AJ"», March 5th on board steamer "Ohio," Mrs. Elizabeth
ap, 60 wh, Stoi.ington.
days
C. Webster Uriines,wife of Mr. Hiram tirimes, on the passage
80
from
New Bedford, bound to Northern Orean. In com
B—Am wh sh Hill i .in, Cook, h mos, clean, llilo.
from New York to I'hagrcs. Her
papy with shipsBenjamin Tinker and Emerald hi me day.
19— wh bk Harvest, Spooner, 15 mos, 70 sp, Hilo.
remains were committed to
the deep, in Lat. 19 34 North Long.
15 wh|sh Gov. Troup, Coggeahall, 19 months, 850 sp,
83' 14 west.
She had resided at Honolulu, for several
Peru.
years, and about 3
years in San Francisco. At both places
16—Am wh ah Catherine, Hull, 19 mos, 150 whale.
she had a large circle
of acquaintances who will -sympathise with her surviving
—Am wh sh Manche, Gilles, 16 moa, 92 ap, 139 wh,
he hns expended (exclusive of lexTahiti.
IriendM, in her early decease. Her disease was consumption
In Honolulu, April 1st, at the U. 8. Hospital, Mr.
18—Am wh ah Euperates, Peakes, 8 moa, 100 ap, Val- ton's house )
#359 00
Thomas
ft. Connely, belonging to Philadelphia.
divia.
He had friends resiThe Chaplain would respectfullyr
ding In that city by the name of Dillon. He came
19—Am wh ship JamesLoper, Whippy,6 mos, 75 sp, 50
passenger
lcknowlcdge the following donato theislands Irom San Francisco, on board the bark
wh, Kealeakekua.
JoTin
20—Fr wh ah L'Angelina, Vauquelin, 5 moa, clean, Jons:
Potter," arriving Feb. 11th.
In Honolulu, April 90th Mr. McLacklin, a native of
Honolulu.
25
Collection at Chapel
Ireland
! $1384 00
In Honolulu, April 89, Mrs. McDuff.
—Am wh ah Eugene, Peddleton, 17 mos, 400 wh, New
Capt. Jones
April M Mr John a 0wenf belonging
Bedford.
?!",''!&gt;
to
8 00
Disputed pilotage
Stockton, California. The deceased was a member of the ().
53—Am wh ah Navy, Norton, 5 moa, 58 sp, Hilo.
bUr ed ca iicK to "&gt;• regulationa of
6 00
W
—Am wh ah James Edward, Luce, 6 mos, 900 sp,
A Sailor
the
Hilo.
Various sources
8* 85 241 10
—Am wh ah Europa. Weeks. 5 mos, 30 ap, Hilo.
—Am wh ship Cambria.Cottle. 6 months, clean.
$117 90
Present debt
—Am wp. ah Natcher., Hail, 5 1-9 mos, 15 sp, Peru.
—Am wh ship Alex Coffin, Pennington, 4 1-9 moths,
inclined to make donations to liquidAny
persons
clean, N. Bedford.
defray the
—Am wh ah Enterprise, Jernegan, 8 moa, 130 sp, 75 ale the present debt upon the Chapel, or $20
PORT OF HONOLULU.
00 per
current expenses of the Chapel, (about
whale, llilo.
24—Am wh ship Cherokee, Smith, 7 mos, clean, Hilo. month.) arc icqtiested to send their contributions to
Arrived.
—Am h bk Pioneer,' Billings, 9 montha, clean, the Chanlain, or pay them to the Sexton.
Mar. 27-Am b* Wm. T. Wheaton, Green, 90 moe,
500 sp.,
Hilo.
r
950 wh.
May 1,1852.
—Am
wh bark Fellows, Pendleton, 18 moa, 50 aperm,
bk
Canada,
—Am
6 moe out,
Weat,
fin
Valparaiso,
Hilo.
clean.
seamen strangers..—The Sea—Am wh ship Phtßnix, Bellows, 7 mos, 65 sperm.
38-Am sh Esther May. Howes, 130 days from Boston.
—Am wh ah Mary and Susan Brown, 17 moa, 170
30—Am sh Conolanus, Grinnel, 7 mos out, 12 sperm.
men's Chapel is open for Public Worship every
00
Hilo.
wh,
1
ap,
sh
—Am
Magnolia, Cox, 6 moa, 130 sp.
Sabbath, at 11 a. m.. and 7 1-2 p. m. Seats Free.
—Am wh sh Nile, Webb, 9 moa, clean.
31-Aiu ah Alice Mandell, Wing 6 months., 50 sperm.
La
Tour
dv
Seamen belonging to vessels (of all nations) visPin,
Smith,
ah
135
c
mos,
—Fr
wh
21
wh.
sh
Good
-Am
Return, Wing 7 months, 830 sperm
this port are invited to call at the Chaplain's
iting
April 1-Am H. bg Emetine, Green 93 ds from
San Francisco.
i-Am. wh ship Corinthian, 6tuart, 9 18
Study, where they will be gratuitously supplied with
PORT
OF
HILO.
mos.
190
so
5.do jflice Frazer, Taber, 7 moe.
copies of the Friend and other rending matter. It
George Washington, Edwards, 5 moa.
Arrived.
will he most convenient for the Chaplain to receive
Helen Augusta, Fates, 16 moa. 150 ap.
Fab. 17—Amwh ah Cortea, Cromwell, 7 l-S moa.
calls from Seamen between 2 and 4 p. m
Bailey, 5 l-S mos 80 sp.
Oitiaen,
Russian
24 —Am whah Columbus, Harria, 5 moa, 40 bbls aperm.
Suomi, Hashagen, 4 1-9 moa.
A weekly religious conference and prayer meeting
Am
99—Am whale hk Pellowa, Pendleton, 17 moa, 50 bbls
Superior, Balicock, 5 1-2 mw.
is held on Wednesday evening at the Vestry. Seasperm, 125 whale.
April 7.—Am
Northern Light. Sum, 4 l-S mos.
men are particularly invited to attend.
—Am wh bk Pioneer, Hillinea, &lt;• moa, 8hbla aperm.
a—Am
bark Rajah, Fisher, h mos.
—Am wh ah Navy, Norton, 5 moa, sft bbla sperm.
April 9— Am wh ah Kutusoff, Pierce, 7 moa
Public services at the Native Churches, on the Sab—Am wh Bh Isaac Hirku, Skinner. 51-2 moa 40 an.
9—French ship Pio IX., Lecrosnier, o moa.
bath, commence at 9 1-2a. m and 2 1-2 p. m.
10—Ambrig Noble, Robertson, 19 daya from San Fran- March 2— Am wh sh JameaEdward, Luce, 5 1-3moa. 200 blla
a[&gt;erm.
The Seamen's Heading Room is open at all hours
cisco.
—Am wh bk Cherokee, Smith, fi moa, clean.
of the day. Strangers arriving and having late foreign
14-Am lierm. brig Glencoe, Sampson, 14 daya from San
■
Europe,
ah
5
30
bbla
Weeka,
moa,
—Am
wh
1-2
aperm.
Franciacn.
•
,
respectfully invited to aid in keeping said
—Am wh ah Benjamin Morgan. Cbapel, 5 moa, 119 papers, are
Apr 91.-Am ah Emily, Hoyer, 16 da fm Baa
Franciaco.
room
with useful reading matter.
supplied
ap.
bbla
ach
Golden
21— Am
Rule, Gragg, 13 d.
do
Donations are respectfully solicited for the sup6—Am wh ah Cambria, Cottle, 6 moa, clean.
ri
Jewell, Feds fm Han Francisco.
*—Am whahip Enterprise, Jernegan,7 1-2 moa, 130ap, port of the Chaplaincy, and the publication of the
Taylor, 16 ds fm Han Fran
•-*"„wh »h Aquetnet,
75 wh, 500 Iba bone.
ChlHaa bk Pescador, Heath, 6 mos. fm Payu,
donations is made
50 sp.
B—Am wh ih Minerva 2nd, Reynolds, 6 l-2mo«, 136 Friend. An annual report of all
bbls aperm.
to the Am. Seamen's Friend Society in New York.
*?■-;*■» "k »b Warren, Heath, 5 moo. 30 sp.
—Am wh ah Heroine, Peaa, 6 mot, clean. W
Any person contribnting $50 is entitled to become a
April 94— Haw brig Baltimore, Thop, 15 ds fm San
Francisco
SB—Am wh sh John Howland, Taylor, Niihau.
11—Am wh ahip Erie, Blackmer, 17 mpa, 9j bbla ap, 2r&gt;o Life Director of the Society, and $20 to become an
wh
Cleared.
12—Am wb ah MagnolialCo x, 5 1-9 montha, 135 ap, 90 Honorary Life Mcml er.
Mar. 97.—Haw wh brig Juno, Corwin, cr'isc.
BAM'L C. DAMON, Seaman's Chaplain.
black fish.

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